In day-to-day life around Seabrook, families juggle work schedules, traffic, school pickups, and weekend travel—so it’s easy to miss early warning signs. When pressure ulcers develop, they’re sometimes first noticed after a family visit or when a resident returns from an appointment.
Common family-reported warning patterns include:
- Skin changes first noticed at home, then worsening after the next days in the facility
- Inconsistent updates about wound status, even when the resident’s condition appears to be declining
- Care plan language that doesn’t match real life, such as turning or “skin checks” being documented without clear evidence of follow-through
- Delays in escalation, where early redness or non-blanchable areas weren’t treated as urgent risk
Even though every medical case is different, pressure ulcers are frequently preventable or at least manageable when a facility monitors risk closely and responds quickly.


