Caledonia is a suburban community with many residents relying on care options across the greater region. In practice, that often means families may deal with:
- Transfers between facilities (hospital → skilled nursing, or one long-term care setting → another), which can blur timelines and records.
- High caregiver workload and shift handoffs, where missed skin checks or delayed repositioning can go unnoticed for hours.
- Cold-weather challenges that affect caregiving routines (e.g., slower mobility, changes in hydration patterns, and more frequent requests for “comfort measures” that still require proper skin assessment).
Those realities can matter legally because pressure-ulcer claims often hinge on the timeline: when risk should have been recognized, what the facility did in response, and how quickly staff acted once early skin changes appeared.


