In South Florida, many nursing home residents have complex health conditions—mobility limits, diabetes, circulation issues, cognitive impairment, and medication side effects—that make them more vulnerable to skin breakdown.
But vulnerability isn’t the same as inevitability. Facilities are expected to:
- assess skin risk regularly,
- document changes in skin integrity,
- reposition residents on a schedule designed for their needs,
- respond promptly when redness or early warning signs appear.
When care is delayed—whether due to staffing shortages, inconsistent turning, incomplete charting, or lagging wound treatment—pressure ulcers can progress from early redness to deeper tissue injury.


