Red Oak is a growing Dallas-area community, and many families use nearby long-term care and rehabilitation facilities. In practice, that can mean residents experience more frequent transitions—admissions, discharge/return cycles, therapy schedules, and shifts in staffing.
Those “normal” movements can also expose gaps, especially when:
- A resident’s mobility changes after an illness or hospital stay
- Staff turnover or understaffing affects turning/skin checks
- The facility is balancing higher census days with limited CNA coverage
- A wound plan exists, but execution doesn’t match what’s documented
Pressure ulcers can progress quickly—what starts as redness or irritation can become deeper tissue damage if prevention and early treatment are delayed.


