In Daytona Beach and across Florida, nursing facilities operate under strict regulatory expectations for resident assessments, care planning, and wound management. When a facility falls short—whether due to staffing shortages, incomplete documentation, or delayed response—pressure ulcers can worsen quickly.
Families often notice problems during times that are typical for Daytona Beach life:
- Short-staffed shifts during busy seasons when schedules and staffing can be strained
- Frequent family visits around medical appointments (and the concern that the facility missed early warning signs)
- Transfers between levels of care (hospital discharge back to a skilled nursing facility, then wound progression)
The legal question is not simply whether a pressure ulcer happened. It’s whether the facility provided the level of prevention and response a reasonably careful provider would have delivered under similar circumstances.


