Pressure ulcers usually develop when skin is exposed to sustained pressure, friction, or shearing forces—especially for residents who are mostly bedbound, have limited mobility, or cannot fully reposition themselves.
In real Klamath Falls nursing home settings, families sometimes realize something is wrong after changes become visible during visits—particularly when:
- a resident’s condition worsens between scheduled family check-ins
- staff documentation is delayed or inconsistent
- early redness is treated as “watch and wait” rather than a prompt escalation
- wound care decisions don’t align with the resident’s assessed risk level
Even when a facility has policies on paper, the real question is whether those policies were followed when it mattered most.


