Many families don’t realize a pressure injury may be preventable until it looks serious. That’s especially true when:
- Care routines change after admissions, hospital transfers, or discharge adjustments.
- Staffing coverage shifts during evenings and weekends, affecting timely skin checks and repositioning.
- Communication is inconsistent between nursing staff and wound care providers.
- Family observations happen in short windows (for example, before or after commuting), so warning signs can be overlooked.
When a pressure ulcer worsens quickly, the timeline matters. The sooner you act, the more likely you are to preserve the records that show what the facility knew—and what it did.


