Lewisville is home to many residents who rely on long-term care after serious illness, surgery, or mobility-limiting conditions. In these situations, facilities must consistently manage risk—especially when residents cannot reposition themselves.
Pressure ulcers can develop when basic prevention doesn’t happen on time, such as:
- Turning and repositioning that doesn’t match the care plan
- Skin checks that are delayed or not documented
- Hygiene and moisture control that aren’t handled promptly
- Wound escalation that takes too long after early redness appears
- Nutrition and hydration support that doesn’t keep pace with healing needs
Texas families often tell us the same frustrating story: staffing is “busy,” questions get redirected, and the resident’s condition worsens before anyone can explain why.


