Groves is a working community where many families coordinate care around jobs, shifts, and travel. That reality can make it easier for warning signs to go unnoticed—especially when a loved one is:
- In a facility after hospitalization following surgery, infection, or a mobility-limiting condition
- Wheelchair-bound for long stretches or unable to reposition without assistance
- Returning to care after a staffing turnover or short-term rehab stay
- Experiencing inconsistent check-ins because family schedules don’t match shift changes
Pressure ulcers aren’t just “skin issues.” They can be a red flag for lapses in skin checks, turning/repositioning, hydration/nutrition support, or timely wound care decisions—especially when the resident’s risk level was known.


