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View the complete list of bedsore treatment resources here, or browse by state:
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Why are rehab patients at risk for developing bed sores?
Thousands of people enter rehab facilities every year for the purpose of healing an injury or to get short-term medical treatment only to get more than they bargained for– a bed sore. The underlying reasons why rehab patients develop bed sores (also referred to as: pressure sore, pressure ulcer or decubitus ulcer) are the same as those who suffer from more chronic maladies:
- Unrelieved pressure on the body
- Malnutrition
- Dehydration
- Staff failing to keep patients clean and dry
However, many relatively healthy and young people who enter skilled nursing facilities or designated rehab centers develop bed sores due an injury which may immobilize them and keep them confined to a bed or wheelchair for extended periods. Staff in rehab facilities must be aware that rehab patients are indeed at risk for developing bed sores and should be diligent with their preventional programs.
Similarly, staff in rehab facilities must be aware that even relatively young patients are at an increased risk for developing bed sores particularly when they are immobilized from medical conditions such:
- Joint replacements
- Hip fractures
- Pelvis fractures
- Leg fractures
- Paralysis
- Coma
Related:
Lawsuit Claims That Nursing Home’s Negligence Resulted In Patient’s Decubitus Ulcers
In For Rehab. Out With Bedsores.
Bed Sore
Resource Center
Information and medical contact resources for bed sore education and treatment.
- Bed Sore Glossary - definitions of common bed sore terms and phrases.
- Bed Sore Treatment Specialists - a directory of bed sore treatment specialists, organized by state.
- Bed Sore Articles - Articles and links to blog posts about bed sores.
- Additional Bed Sore Resources
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Have a question about bed sores that you can't find on the website? Please use this form to send this question to an experienced nursing home lawyer:
Bed Sore Question Categories
- Amputation
- Amyloidosis
- Assessment
- Assisted Living Facilities
- Autonomic Dysreflexia
- Bed Sore In Hospital
- Bed Sore Lawsuits
- Bed Sores In Nursing Homes
- Blood Labs
- Causes of Bed Sores
- Cellulitis
- Colostomy
- Common Areas For Bed Sores
- Contractures
- Debridement
- Decubitus Ulcer / Pressure Ulcer / Pressure Sore / Bed Sore
- Dehydration
- Dressings For Wounds
- Flap Reconstruction
- Gangrene
- General Information
- Group Homes
- Healing Bed Sores
- Infection In Bed Sore
- Legal Aspects
- Malnutrition
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- Mentally Disabled Patients
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- Research On Bed Sores
- Sepsis
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- Stages & Development
- Tunneling Bed Sore
- Wound Care
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- Wrongful Death