In real-life long-term care, pressure ulcers can appear after a period of reduced mobility, missed repositioning, delayed wound response, or inadequate skin-risk monitoring. Families often describe patterns like:
- Staff assistance arriving later than expected after a resident’s scheduled turning or hygiene routine
- Inconsistent notes about skin checks or wound staging
- A sudden change in condition (redness, discoloration, drainage) noticed after a gap in care documentation
Oregon residents and families should also know that nursing facilities are expected to follow care plans and respond to clinical warning signs. When those steps don’t occur—or when records don’t match what residents experienced—serious questions arise about neglect.


