In smaller communities, it’s common for families to rely on familiar routines—regular visits, known staff, and the assumption that care plans are being followed consistently. But pressure ulcers can develop quietly when a resident’s risk level changes or when daily documentation doesn’t match the care actually delivered.
For example, residents who spend long stretches in wheelchairs, have diabetes or circulation issues, or are recovering from illness may need more frequent repositioning than they did weeks earlier. When risk isn’t updated and wound checks aren’t handled promptly, the first visible “red spot” can arrive after critical prevention windows have passed.


