Nutrition and hydration problems don’t always look dramatic at first. In real life, families in Celina frequently report a pattern that starts with “small” changes and then accelerates:
- Intake that never improves: repeated meal refusals or “encouraged” intake with no clear assistance plan.
- Weight trending down: clothes fitting differently, visible muscle loss, or continued decline between documented weights.
- New skin breakdown: pressure injuries that appear after weeks of inadequate repositioning or delayed wound care.
- Cognitive and mobility changes: unusual confusion, dizziness, falls, or worsening weakness consistent with dehydration.
- Lab and symptom mismatch: bloodwork that indicates dehydration or poor nutrition while notes don’t reflect timely escalation.
If you’re seeing these issues, it’s often because the facility either didn’t recognize risk early enough or didn’t respond with the level of monitoring and intervention that a reasonable nursing home should provide.


