Bedsores don’t appear “out of nowhere.” In nursing homes and skilled nursing facilities, pressure ulcers typically develop when sustained pressure, friction, or shearing isn’t managed with consistent repositioning, skin checks, and timely escalation when early redness appears.
In the Keizer area, families often describe the same pattern after discharge or transfer: the resident was stable for a period, then skin changes were noticed late—or only after family members pushed for attention. Sometimes records show risk factors (limited mobility, incontinence, reduced sensation), but the care plan’s daily actions don’t match what wound outcomes suggest.
Common red flags families report include:
- Repositioning assistance not happening on schedule
- Gaps in documented skin assessments
- Delays in notifying clinicians or updating the care plan after warning signs
- Inconsistent wound care follow-through
- Documentation that reads “complete” even though family members observed missed care


