Pressure ulcers are not just a skin issue. They often reflect missed prevention steps—such as timely repositioning, moisture management, skin checks, and follow-through on wound care orders.
Families in Georgetown frequently describe patterns like:
- Inconsistent updates from the facility when you call after noticing redness or discoloration
- Short-staffed shifts that leave residents waiting longer for toileting, hygiene, or position changes
- Wound appearance after a change in condition, like a hospital discharge or a fall recovery
- Care plan mismatch, where the documented plan says repositioning occurs, but the wound history suggests delays
If your loved one lives in a long-term care facility and is also dealing with mobility limits, diabetes, poor circulation, or dementia, the prevention burden is higher—and the legal expectations are correspondingly strict.


