Pressure injuries & bed sores

Pressure sores from sitting or lying in one position.

Also called bed sores or pressure ulcers, these form when constant pressure cuts off blood flow to the skin — usually over the tailbone, hips, heels, or back. They can develop fast in someone with limited mobility, and they’re very treatable when caught early.

Often treated at homeAcross the Metro EastWe coordinate your care

When someone can’t shift their weight easily — after surgery, with advanced illness, or with limited mobility — the skin over bony areas takes the brunt of the pressure. It starts as a reddened or darkened patch and, if pressure continues, opens into a wound. For families caring for a loved one at home, these can be frightening and feel like they appeared overnight.

Our clinicians treat the wound and tackle the cause: relieving pressure, protecting fragile skin, managing moisture, and supporting nutrition. We also coach family caregivers and facility staff so the same spot doesn’t keep breaking down.

What to watch for

  • Skin that stays red, purple, or darkened and doesn’t fade when pressure is off
  • A blister, shallow open sore, or deeper wound over a bony area
  • Tailbone, hips, heels, shoulder blades, or the back of the head
  • Skin that feels firmer, softer, warmer, or cooler than nearby skin
  • Any open area on someone who spends most of the day in bed or a chair

What care looks like

How we help this heal.

We assess

A clinician stages and measures the wound and checks the skin everywhere pressure builds up.

We treat

We clean and dress the wound, remove dead tissue when appropriate, and watch for infection.

We coordinate

We put a pressure-relief plan in place — repositioning, cushioning, heel protection — and show caregivers exactly how to do it.

We follow through

We coordinate with facility staff or home health so the plan holds between our visits.

When to seek help fast: Spreading redness, foul drainage, fever, or confusion in a loved one can signal serious infection — call us, and seek emergency care if they seem very unwell.

Related wounds we treat

We handle these too.

Illustration of the Metro East service area along the Mississippi River

We’re ready when you are

Have a wound that needs attention?

Call 314-325-0126 or request care. Tell us what’s going on and we’ll help you find the right next step.

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