In suburban areas like Grafton, families may visit at predictable times—after work, on weekends, or between childcare schedules. That means a resident’s skin can worsen between visits, and by the time families notice, the injury may already be advanced.
Common Grafton-area scenarios we see in pressure ulcer cases include:
- Long stretches between family observations when a resident needs hands-on repositioning.
- After-hospital transitions where the facility is expected to follow a new care plan immediately, not “figure it out later.”
- Residents with limited mobility (post-surgery, stroke recovery, advanced age) who require consistent turning and skin monitoring.
- Documentation gaps—the records may show checklists without matching wound progression.
When neglect is present, it often shows up as patterns: inconsistent skin assessments, delayed wound treatment, or failure to follow the care plan created after an assessment.


