Many pressure ulcer injuries develop in predictable situations—especially when residents have limited mobility or require frequent repositioning. In Clarksville, we commonly see families dealing with:
- Residents transitioning after hospitalization (sometimes arriving with new mobility limits, swallowing issues, or changing nutrition needs)
- Facilities managing short-staffed shifts during peak demand periods (which can affect skin checks and turning schedules)
- Higher risk for dehydration or poor intake, particularly when residents struggle with appetite, fatigue, or medication side effects
- Care plan handoff gaps between units or between hospital and long-term care
When these factors overlap, prevention can fail quietly. Then the first notice is often not “redness on day one,” but a wound that has already progressed.


