In Pleasant Prairie-area long-term care settings, residents are often older, medically complex, and less able to reposition themselves. Pressure ulcers typically form when pressure, friction, and moisture affect the skin over time—particularly over bony areas like the hips, tailbone, heels, and shoulders.
When care is adequate, early skin changes are usually caught and addressed quickly. When care is not adequate, early deterioration can progress before anyone connects the dots. That’s why families often report a pattern like:
- “It looked like irritation at first, then got much worse.”
- “Staff told us they were monitoring, but the wound advanced anyway.”
- “The care plan existed, but the resident’s condition didn’t match the documentation.”


