In Florida nursing homes, the standard of care is supposed to include consistent skin monitoring, timely repositioning, appropriate wound care, and adjustments when risk changes. Pressure ulcers usually don’t appear out of nowhere—they’re often the end result of small failures that stack up.
In real cases, families in Alachua and the surrounding Gainesville area commonly report patterns like:
- Delayed response after noticing redness or a new sore
- Inconsistent turning/repositioning during long stretches without check-ins
- Care plan not matching what you’re seeing day-to-day
- Wound care that begins late or seems to change without clear documentation
- Communication gaps between nursing staff and clinicians
Even when a resident has medical risk factors, facilities are still required to act on early warning signs. The legal question is whether the facility’s actions (or inactions) fell below what a reasonably careful provider would do.


