Pressure ulcers aren’t “minor skin problems.” They often signal that the resident’s daily care routine—repositioning, hygiene, skin assessment, nutrition coordination, and timely wound escalation—didn’t match what the resident needed.
In Rockport, many families coordinate care while also managing work schedules and travel between home, medical appointments, and the facility. That makes it especially important to document what you observe early: redness, persistent soreness, changes in mobility, drainage, odor, or sudden worsening after a shift when you weren’t there.
When neglect is involved, the hardest part is usually not understanding that an ulcer happened—it’s proving how and when the facility failed to respond appropriately.


