Many pressure ulcers develop during periods when a facility is short-staffed, when documentation is inconsistent, or when residents need more help than they’re receiving. In a smaller community like Avon Park, families may also miss early warning signs because they’re relying on short visits, phone updates, or discharge information that doesn’t fully show what happened week to week.
You may notice one of these red flags:
- New redness or open areas that appear after extended time in bed or a wheelchair
- Delays between when concerns were raised and when wound care begins
- Confusing explanations such as “it happens even with good care” without specifics
- Care notes that don’t match what you were told during check-ins
When a pressure ulcer appears after admission, the timing matters. If risk factors were present—limited mobility, incontinence, impaired sensation, diabetes, dehydration—Florida facilities are expected to respond quickly with prevention and monitoring.


