Many families first notice a sore after a transition—hospital discharge, a new medication, a decline in mobility, or a change in how staff transfer a resident. In long-term care, these are exactly the moments when facilities should tighten monitoring and follow the resident’s care plan.
In Holmen and the surrounding area, families often describe similar patterns:
- The resident becomes less able to reposition after illness or surgery.
- Staff documentation suggests routine checks, but the wound progresses faster than expected.
- Early redness or skin irritation isn’t treated as a warning sign.
A pressure ulcer is not just “skin irritation.” It can signal that a resident’s risk assessment, turning schedule, moisture management, or wound care response wasn’t adequate.


