In the Martin area, families often spend long days traveling between home, work, and appointments—then discover the problem after a routine check-in. When a facility’s documentation doesn’t match what you observe (or what should have been happening), it can be hard to know whether the wound was preventable.
Pressure ulcers can develop when residents who can’t reposition themselves don’t receive consistent turning/skin checks, or when early warning signs aren’t escalated to the right clinical level. Common contributing issues include:
- Missed or late repositioning for residents who are bedridden or mostly chair-bound
- Gaps in scheduled skin assessments and wound measurements
- Delayed response to redness, non-blanchable areas, or other early indicators
- Care plan instructions that aren’t followed during busy shifts
- Nutrition/hydration concerns not addressed promptly enough to support healing
The key point: pressure ulcers are often avoidable when facilities follow reasonable protocols for risk screening, monitoring, and timely wound care.


