In a smaller community like Athens, families often stay actively involved—visiting during the week, checking in around work schedules, and coordinating with nearby hospitals. That can be a strength, but it also creates a common pattern we see in bed sore cases:
- A resident looks fine at the start of the week.
- A wound shows up or changes quickly after a period of heavy staffing demands, shift turnover, or missed documentation.
- Family members notice delays—like when skin checks, repositioning, or wound care don’t seem to match the care plan.
Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They’re usually connected to consistent prevention steps—turning schedules, skin monitoring, friction/shear reduction, and timely wound treatment—that must be carried out daily.


