In Miami Beach, long-term care residents may cycle through different levels of assistance and, in some cases, return after hospital stays or rehab transfers. Those transitions are exactly when skin risks can be missed—especially if a facility’s staff didn’t update care plans promptly after a change in mobility, nutrition, or sensation.
Pressure ulcers are commonly linked to failures like:
- Missed or incomplete skin checks during shifts
- Inconsistent repositioning schedules for residents who can’t turn themselves
- Delayed wound staging/assessment after new redness appears
- Gaps in follow-up after discharge instructions from hospitals or wound specialists
- Care plan updates not matching the resident’s current condition
When families describe “it seemed fine, then it wasn’t,” the records often hold the answer—whether the risk was recognized and whether the facility responded in time.


