Pressure ulcers are not an accident of aging. They usually develop when a resident’s risk is not managed consistently—especially for people who are bedridden, have limited mobility, or can’t reliably reposition themselves.
In many Texas facilities, families notice patterns such as:
- Uneven turning schedules (turns happen “when someone remembers” rather than on a plan)
- Delayed response to redness or skin changes
- Inconsistent hygiene/toileting support that increases moisture and skin breakdown
- Gaps in wound care documentation (records don’t match what families observed)
- Under-addressed nutrition/hydration concerns that slow healing
For Hurst-area families, a common stressor is distance and scheduling—visiting between shifts, coordinating appointments, and managing transportation. That makes it even more important to preserve evidence and ask for specific records early.


