Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They typically develop when a resident spends long periods in the same position without effective pressure relief, when skin checks aren’t done consistently, or when wound care is delayed.
In everyday Farmington life, families often see patterns like:
- Long stretches between family check-ins (especially when residents rely on facility staff for turning and hygiene)
- After-discharge changes—a resident comes back with mobility limitations, and the facility must adjust repositioning, nutrition support, and skin monitoring right away
- Inconsistent documentation around turning schedules, skin assessments, or when redness was first noted
Even when a facility has policies on paper, the question becomes whether those policies were actually implemented for your loved one.


