In the real world, pressure ulcers often develop when a resident’s care plan isn’t matched to their day-to-day needs—especially when staffing schedules, shift changes, and communication gaps interrupt consistent repositioning and skin checks.
For families in Largo, common warning scenarios include:
- Long stretches between visits or shift handoffs: Residents can go hours without the skin checks or repositioning that their risk level requires.
- Mobility limitations that change quickly: After illness, surgery, falls, or hospitalization, a resident may become less mobile, but the facility may not promptly adjust care.
- Delayed recognition of early redness: Early-stage skin changes can be missed or treated as “normal irritation” instead of a preventable warning sign.
- Documentation that doesn’t match what you observed: You may have reported concerns, but the record reflects incomplete assessments or late wound care intervention.
When you combine these patterns with the reality of Florida’s busy long-term care landscape, it’s easy for preventable harm to slip through. A lawyer’s job is to connect the dots using the records that exist—and push for the records that should.


