In Doral, many residents and families are navigating care while also dealing with the practical realities of Florida life—frequent clinician visits, changing care needs, and the challenge of getting consistent updates from different shifts.
When a pressure ulcer shows up, common patterns include:
- Turning/repositioning gaps during periods when staffing is stretched or assignments change between shifts.
- Delayed skin assessments—especially when a resident’s mobility declines after illness, surgery, or a fall.
- Wound care changes that don’t match the care plan, such as inconsistent dressing updates or unclear escalation when the ulcer worsens.
- Communication breakdowns between nursing staff and clinicians about early warning signs (redness, heat, non-blanchable areas).
These issues matter legally because pressure ulcers often serve as a “recordable” sign of whether a facility followed an appropriate prevention and monitoring plan.


