Pressure injuries aren’t “just bad luck.” They typically occur when a resident’s risk factors and needs aren’t matched with consistent, hands-on prevention.
In the Houston region—including Stafford—families frequently report similar patterns:
- Long gaps between family visits while a resident is left in the same position for extended periods
- Care plan changes that appear in documents but aren’t followed on the floor
- Staffing and turnover pressures that lead to missed skin checks or delayed wound response
- Communication breakdowns between nursing staff and wound/medical providers
When these issues show up during daily care, pressure ulcers can develop and progress quickly—sometimes before anyone outside the facility fully understands what went wrong.


