Pressure ulcers aren’t just “skin irritation.” They often start with early warning signs—redness, warmth, discoloration, or complaints of discomfort—that should trigger prompt reassessment and preventive changes.
In Temple, families frequently describe similar patterns:
- Inconsistent family visitation due to commute schedules, so changes are noticed later than they might be with daily monitoring.
- Residents with multiple medical needs who require frequent repositioning, moisture management, and careful wound observation.
- Care transitions (hospital discharge back to a facility) where risk level may increase, but preventive steps aren’t updated quickly enough.
When those basics slip, a minor change can progress into a painful, medically complex wound.


