Pressure ulcers can start quietly: a small area of redness, a change in skin texture, or a wound that looks “minor” at first. But on residents with limited mobility, those early warning signs can worsen fast.
In Tacoma-area long-term care settings, families commonly report issues such as:
- Inconsistent turning schedules after shift changes or staffing gaps
- Delayed wound evaluation after a family member raises concerns
- Care plan updates not reflected in daily notes after a health decline
- Documentation that doesn’t match observed care (for example, fewer skin checks than the care plan required)
The result is a timeline that feels confusing—until you compare what the facility said should happen with what the records show actually happened.


