Pressure ulcers typically form when a person stays in the same position too long or when friction and moisture aren’t managed properly. In day-to-day facilities, preventable breakdowns often stem from:
- Missed or rushed repositioning for residents who can’t turn themselves
- Inconsistent skin checks during shifts (especially at shift changes)
- Delayed wound escalation after early redness or “non-blanchable” skin changes
- Care plan drift, where the written plan doesn’t match what staff actually do
- Nutrition and hydration gaps that slow healing and increase complication risk
For Herriman families, a common pattern is how quickly concerns become serious while loved ones are being transported between levels of care—rehab, hospital, and back again. That movement can make documentation harder to piece together unless someone knows what to request and how to organize it.


