In Texas, residents often rely on consistent day-to-day nursing home routines—turning schedules, skin checks, hydration support, nutrition monitoring, and prompt wound care. Pressure ulcers typically don’t “just happen” without contributing factors such as prolonged pressure, friction/shear, moisture, and limited mobility.
In communities like Rio Grande City, families may notice patterns that fit real life in long-term care: a resident seems uncomfortable but receives delayed responses, documentation doesn’t match what family members observe, or changes occur after staffing shifts or facility workflow disruptions.
A pressure sore can be medical, but it can also reflect failure to follow accepted care practices.


