In our experience, pressure ulcer cases often start the same way: a family member sees a sudden change—redness that doesn’t fade, a wound that seems to worsen quickly, or documentation that appears to lag behind what was observed in person.
Port Orchard families may also face practical delays. Loved ones might be transported between facilities, hospitals, and outpatient wound care appointments across the county, and those transitions can create gaps in communication. Those gaps are exactly why the timeline matters.
Common early warning signs families report include:
- Skin discoloration that appears soon after a resident has been less mobile
- Missed or inconsistent turning/repositioning based on what family members observe
- Delayed wound care updates or changing descriptions across reports
- Family concerns raised more than once before staff respond with a new plan


