Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear out of nowhere. They typically develop when residents spend long stretches in the same position, when skin checks aren’t done with the required frequency, or when early warning signs aren’t escalated.
In the Allentown region, families often describe a pattern like this:
- A resident returns from a hospital stay or rehab and needs assistance with repositioning and mobility.
- Family members notice redness or skin changes, but responses feel delayed.
- Wound care begins only after the injury is more advanced.
- Documentation later shows risk scores, care plans, or “skin checks” that don’t line up with what family observed.
Even when a facility has policies on paper, gaps can occur—especially when staffing levels are strained, shift coverage changes, or communication between nursing staff and clinicians is inconsistent.


