Germantown is largely suburban and residential, but long-term care facilities here still serve residents from a wide area of the Milwaukee region. That means families may notice patterns like:
- High resident turnover or fluctuating staffing that affects consistent skin monitoring.
- Residents with limited mobility (after strokes, falls, or surgeries) who require dependable repositioning.
- Care plans that get updated after changes in health, but implementation lags behind paperwork.
- Time pressure during shift changes, when skin checks and repositioning are most likely to be missed.
Pressure ulcers form when pressure, friction, and shear forces remain on the skin long enough—especially when a person can’t shift their own weight. In a well-run facility, prevention is built into daily routines. When it isn’t, even a “mild” sore can worsen quickly.


