Health Article | KIN Rehabilitation
Pressure Injuries in Older Adults
5 Things Families Should Know Before the Problem Becomes Severe
Home care can be safe, but it needs an individualized prevention plan—something many families discover only after skin damage has appeared.
Medically reviewed by Dr. Kamonchat Chokthanomsap and prepared by Lalada Taotep, Registered Nurse | 8-minute read | Updated 2026
In This Article
KIN Rehabilitation & Homecareis a medical rehabilitation and older-adult care provider founded in 2018 byDr. Thongchai Chokthanomsapwith six branches serving Bangkok, Pattaya and Salaya. This article helps families caring for an older person at home understand pressure-injury risk and recognize when to seek help from atrained care professionalso that care remains safe, consistent and appropriate to the person’s needs.
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1. How Serious Are Pressure Injuries in Older Adults?
Quick answer:A pressure injury is localized damage to the skin or deeper tissue caused by pressure, or pressure combined with shear. It can worsen and may lead to serious infection, but risk varies by mobility, skin condition, circulation, nutrition, moisture, medical devices and other illnesses. Anyone with limited movement should have an individualized prevention plan.
Pressure injuries—also called pressure ulcers, pressure sores or bedsores—usually develop over a bony prominence or beneath a medical device. Pressure duration and intensity, shear, moisture, impaired sensation and reduced tissue tolerance all influence risk. Damage can begin beneath intact skin, so waiting for an open wound may delay treatment.
Possible complications of an advanced or infected pressure injury
Sepsis
A spreading wound infection can lead to sepsis, a life-threatening emergency requiring urgent hospital care.
Tissue necrosis
Dead tissue may need specialist wound care and, in selected cases, medical or surgical debridement.
Bone or joint infection
Deep injuries can involve exposed or palpable bone and may be complicated by osteomyelitis.
Prolonged healing
Deep wounds may take months to heal and can require multidisciplinary treatment; healing time varies greatly.
Costs vary widely
The cost of home care, equipment, dressings and hospital treatment depends on wound severity, staffing, location and the person’s medical needs. Early risk assessment and prevention can reduce avoidable harm, discomfort and treatment burden. Request a written quotation rather than relying on general market estimates.
2. Pressure-Injury Stages and Early Signs Families May Miss
Quick answer:Pressure injuries are described as Stages 1–4, but the classification also includes unstageable pressure injury and deep tissue pressure injury. Stage 1 has intact skin with non-blanchable color change; prompt pressure relief and clinical assessment may prevent further deterioration, although progression cannot always be guaranteed.
Early damage may be missed because the skin is still intact and the person may have reduced sensation. In darker skin tones, redness may be less visible; look for a persistent change from the person’s usual skin color, temperature, firmness, texture or localized pain.
Stage 1 — Intact skin with non-blanchable color change
The skin remains intact but has a persistent color change that does not blanch with light pressure. Temperature, firmness, softness or pain may differ from nearby tissue. Offload pressure immediately, do not massage the area, and obtain assessment from a trained clinician.
Stage 2 — Partial-thickness skin loss
There is exposed dermis or a shallow open wound, sometimes presenting as an intact or ruptured serum-filled blister. Adipose tissue, granulation tissue, slough and eschar are not visible. A qualified clinician should confirm the cause and select appropriate wound care.
Stage 3 — Full-thickness skin loss
Adipose tissue and granulation tissue may be visible. Slough or eschar may be present but does not obscure the depth; undermining or tunneling may occur. Fascia, muscle, tendon, cartilage and bone are not exposed. Specialist wound assessment is required.
Stage 4 — Full-thickness skin and tissue loss
Fascia, muscle, tendon, cartilage or bone is exposed or directly palpable. Undermining, tunneling, slough or eschar may be present. Treatment is individualized and does not always require surgery, but urgent medical review is needed if there are signs of infection, systemic illness or rapidly worsening tissue damage.
Important classification note:In addition to Stages 1–4, an injury may be unstageable when slough or eschar obscures its true depth, or classified as a deep tissue pressure injury when deep red, maroon or purple discoloration suggests damage beneath intact or non-intact skin. Staging should be performed by a trained clinician; prevention and early action remain essential.
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3. What Should Be Done Every Day to Reduce Risk at Home?
Quick answer:Prevention combines an individualized repositioning schedule, regular skin and tissue checks, moisture and incontinence care, nutrition and hydration assessment, mobility where safe, heel offloading and an appropriate pressure-redistributing mattress or cushion. No single measure is sufficient for everyone.
Step 1 — Follow an individualized repositioning and mobility plan
There is no universal two-hour rule for every person. Repositioning frequency should be documented according to risk, skin response, comfort, mobility, medical condition and the support surface being used. Some people need more frequent changes, while others may safely have longer intervals. Use lifting or slide aids to reduce shear, offload the heels, and ask a clinician to teach safe positioning. A support surface never completely replaces repositioning.
Step 2 — Check skin and tissue regularly
Inspect bony areas and the skin beneath medical devices in good light. Common sites include the sacrum, hips, heels, ankles, elbows, back of the head and ears. Look and feel for color change, warmth or coolness, swelling, firmness, softness, pain, blistering or broken skin. The frequency should match the person’s risk and care plan.
Step 3 — Keep skin clean, protected and appropriately hydrated
Cleanse promptly after incontinence using a gentle product, pat rather than rub, change absorbent products as needed, and use a barrier preparation when moisture-associated damage is likely. Moisturize dry skin. Do not massage or vigorously rub skin over pressure points.
Step 4 — Assess nutrition and hydration
Poor intake, unintended weight loss, dehydration and nutritional deficiency can reduce tissue tolerance and delay healing. Arrange nutritional assessment when there is a wound or risk of malnutrition. Provide adequate energy, protein, fluids and micronutrients according to the person’s medical plan; do not automatically add zinc, vitamin C or high-dose supplements when intake is already adequate.
Step 5 — Use the right pressure-redistributing equipment
Use a pressure-redistributing foam mattress or another clinically appropriate support surface selected for the person’s weight, body shape, mobility, moisture, wound location and home environment. Wheelchair users may need a pressure-redistributing cushion and seating assessment. Keep heels completely offloaded when advised. Equipment prices and availability vary, and an air mattress does not replace repositioning or skin checks.
4. Family Care Alone or Professional Support at Home?
Quick answer:Many families can provide safe care after proper training, written instructions and access to clinical support. Professional help may be useful when the person needs frequent assistance, complex transfers, wound assessment, nursing procedures or overnight care. The required role should be matched to the task and professional scope.
Ask whether the home team can carry out the documented prevention plan consistently, use equipment safely, recognize deterioration and obtain clinical help promptly.
Comparison: family-led care and professional support at home
| Care need | Family-led care | Professional support |
|---|---|---|
| Follow the individualized repositioning plan | Requires trained help at the times specified in the care plan, which may include overnight assistance. | A trained caregiver can assist according to the written plan and handover requirements. |
| Skin observation and escalation | Family members need practical teaching and a clear escalation pathway. | Staff training, competency and supervision should be verified. |
| Wound assessment and treatment | New or worsening wounds should be assessed promptly by a qualified clinician; hospital care is not required for every wound. | An RN or appropriately qualified wound clinician assesses and treats according to scope; a CG/NA may assist only with delegated non-clinical tasks. |
| Nutrition and feeding support | Families can help after training and must follow swallowing, tube-feeding and nutrition plans. | Select staff with verified competency for the person’s specific feeding needs. |
| Reporting changes | Families should receive written warning signs and contact instructions. | A service should document observations and escalate concerns through an agreed clinical pathway. |
| Family workload | Workload can be substantial; respite and shared care may help prevent exhaustion. | Scheduled support can give family caregivers time to rest and maintain other responsibilities. |
Planning for sustainable care
Long-term care can be physically and emotionally demanding, especially when one person carries most of the work. A realistic schedule, caregiver training, respite, equipment and professional support can make the plan safer and more sustainable. Asking for help is part of responsible care, not a failure.
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5. KIN Home Care — Coordinated Support at Home
Quick answer:KIN can arrange home-care personnel based on an initial assessment, the required tasks, location, staffing availability and service terms. Families should confirm credentials, supervision, reporting arrangements, replacement procedures and the emergency escalation pathway before service begins.
Families remain central to decisions and emotional support. Home-care staff can assist with daily activities, repositioning, hygiene, skin observation and documentation according to the care plan, while licensed professionals handle assessment, wound treatment, medicine decisions and other regulated clinical tasks.
Caregiver / Nursing Assistant (CG/NA)
May assist with daily activities, hygiene, positioning and skin observation according to training and a delegated care plan. Ask for verified identity, background checks, training records and role boundaries.
Can perform nursing assessment, develop or supervise the wound-care plan, administer medicines when prescribed, monitor clinical status and coordinate medical review. The need for an RN depends on wound complexity and the person’s overall condition—not stage number alone.
Replacement staffing process
Replacement arrangements depend on urgency, location, staff availability and the contract. Confirm expected response times and a temporary family backup plan in writing.
Access to additional services
If needs change or the person requires additionalphysical therapysupport, the family can ask about transition toKIN residential careorDay Caresubject to clinical reassessment, availability and service criteria.
Families can request an initial case discussion to identify the appropriate level of care. Confirm whether any assessment is free, what it includes, and whether a clinical home visit has a fee. Service reviews are available atKIN service testimonials
“Caring for someone does not mean carrying every task alone. A safe plan combines family involvement, trained support and timely clinical assessment so that care can continue without exhausting the people who provide it.”
— KIN Rehabilitation & Homecare | Established 2018 | Six branches serving Bangkok, Pattaya and Salaya
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