Front Royal residents may be served by a range of long-term care settings, including skilled nursing facilities and rehabilitation centers that support older adults with mobility limits. In those environments, pressure ulcers can escalate fast when prevention isn’t handled consistently—especially for residents who:
- spend long stretches in a wheelchair or bed
- have limited sensation or difficulty communicating discomfort
- struggle with nutrition, hydration, or wound healing
- require frequent turning and skin checks
Pressure ulcers aren’t just “skin problems.” They can lead to deeper tissue damage and complications that require more aggressive treatment. For families, the hardest part is that early stages can look subtle, and by the time a wound is obvious, the facility may already have missed opportunities to intervene.


