In Jacksonville, families often juggle work schedules, traffic on major corridors, and long-distance travel between home and facilities—especially if the resident requires frequent follow-ups. When a pressure ulcer is missed early, the injury can worsen before a family member realizes the situation has changed.
Common Jacksonville scenarios we see (or hear about) include:
- Short-staffing strains during peak demand periods, when facilities rely on understaffed coverage.
- Residents transferred between units or levels of care, where documentation and handoff details must be accurate.
- Higher-risk patients—such as those living with diabetes, limited mobility, or cognitive impairments—who need strict turning and skin checks.
The legal question is not whether a pressure ulcer is “possible.” It’s whether the facility’s systems and staff responses met Florida’s expected standard of reasonable care for that resident’s risk.


