Edmond residents often visit facilities after work or on weekends, sometimes with gaps between check-ins. That timing matters because pressure injuries can be subtle at first—warmth, redness, or changes in skin texture that don’t look serious until they progress.
Common local scenarios we see described by families include:
- A resident who spent longer stretches seated during the day (wheelchair time) and then returned to bed with no clear explanation of skin checks.
- A loved one who experienced a decline after an illness, surgery, or medication adjustment, followed by inconsistent updates about repositioning or wound status.
- Families who raised concerns, were reassured, and later learned the wound had already been documented but not communicated clearly.
The key point: in pressure ulcer cases, “we didn’t know” defenses often collide with what the facility’s own skin assessments and care plan required.


