Pressure ulcers often begin quietly—by the time a family notices worsening skin, the facility may have already missed early warning signs. In day-to-day life around South Ogden, many residents’ families work around commuting schedules and shift coverage. That can mean fewer daytime check-ins and fewer opportunities to catch small changes early.
Common “early miss” patterns families describe include:
- Skin changes noticed later than expected (after the resident returns from an appointment or after a weekend gap)
- Inconsistent updates about wound status, treatment changes, or what staff are doing during each shift
- Care plan language that sounds correct, but clinical notes and wound progression that don’t match
A pressure ulcer case typically turns on whether the facility followed accepted care practices for the resident’s risk level—not on whether a sore can ever happen.


