Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear out of nowhere. They tend to develop when a facility fails to manage risk factors that are well-known to clinicians—such as limited mobility, impaired sensation, incontinence, poor nutrition, or the need for scheduled turning and skin checks.
In Pottsville-area facilities, families often notice breakdowns in the everyday routines that prevent skin injury, for example:
- Turning and repositioning gaps for residents who can’t move themselves
- Delayed response after family members report redness, warmth, or discoloration
- Inconsistent toileting/hygiene support, increasing moisture and friction
- Care plan not matched to actual staffing or follow-through
- Wound care that doesn’t escalate promptly when an early stage worsens
When the timeline is unclear, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. But pressure ulcer cases often come down to whether the facility recognized risk and responded in a way a reasonable provider would.


