Pressure ulcers typically show up when residents are left in the same position too long or when skin checks and wound response aren’t handled promptly. But in the real world, families in Nederland frequently report patterns like:
- Skin redness noticed after a gap in family visits (especially when staff are short-handed)
- Delayed updates about wound status, odor, drainage, or pain
- Inconsistent turning/repositioning—sometimes noticed when a resident is suddenly more uncomfortable than before
- Care plan “paper compliance” that doesn’t reflect what’s happening during busy shifts
These issues matter legally because they can indicate that the facility didn’t provide the level of preventive care a reasonably careful nursing home should provide—particularly for residents with limited mobility, higher fall risk, diabetes, dehydration, or cognitive impairments.


