Every facility has policies on paper. What matters is whether those policies were carried out—on the days when families couldn’t be there every hour.
In Canyon-area long-term care situations, loved ones often report patterns like:
- Long gaps between staff check-ins when a resident is hard to reposition or has limited mobility
- Missed or delayed turns after a change in condition (fall risk, surgery recovery, or worsening diabetes)
- Wound notes that start late, even though redness or irritation was visible earlier
- Inconsistent skin checks in the chart compared to what family members observed
- Discharge summaries that don’t match the wound history, suggesting documentation lag or incomplete tracking
If you saw early redness or a “small sore” that worsened quickly, that timeline can be crucial. Pressure ulcers generally don’t appear overnight without a preventable failure—such as delayed response to skin risk or insufficient repositioning.


