Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They typically develop when skin and tissue stay under pressure for too long without the repositioning, skin checks, and wound response a care plan requires.
In Fort Worth area facilities—where many residents require daily hands-on care—families sometimes notice warning signs after the fact: redness that doesn’t improve, wounds that seem to worsen between visits, or changes that occur while loved ones are being transported for appointments or recovery care.
Acting early matters because:
- Wound staging and documentation get harder to reconstruct if time passes.
- Facilities may update care plans after the fact, which can complicate causation disputes.
- Delayed response can lead to infection, longer treatment, and higher medical costs.


