In Mount Pleasant, many families are juggling work, school, and travel time to visit. That can mean staff updates are the only “window” into your loved one’s day-to-day condition—until a sudden change shows up in a wound assessment, discharge summary, or family conversation.
Pressure ulcers often develop when one or more of the following breaks down:
- Repositioning isn’t done often enough for the resident’s risk level
- Skin checks are delayed or not documented clearly
- Hygiene and moisture control aren’t handled consistently
- Nutrition/hydration support isn’t adjusted as health changes
- Wound care escalations don’t happen promptly when early redness appears
When these gaps occur, the injury can progress from early warning signs to more severe tissue damage—sometimes over days, not months.


