Pressure ulcers aren’t just “skin problems.” When a resident can’t reposition easily, stays in the same position too long, or doesn’t receive consistent skin checks and moisture management, wounds can worsen quickly.
In many Hurricane-area cases, families describe a similar pattern:
- concerns were raised, but the facility’s response felt slow or unclear
- documentation didn’t reflect the resident’s condition or timeline
- wound care orders existed on paper, but the wound progressed anyway
A pressure ulcer can also be complicated by diabetes, poor circulation, dehydration, limited mobility, cognitive impairment, or recent surgery—factors that make proper assessment and prevention even more important.


