Pressure ulcers can develop when a facility fails to consistently manage the factors that cause skin breakdown: sustained pressure, friction, moisture, and delayed response to early warning signs like persistent redness.
In Miami Springs, families often describe a familiar pattern: the resident is medically stable enough to live in a facility, but needs frequent repositioning, assistance with hygiene, and monitoring that can be harder to deliver when staffing is stretched. Sometimes the gaps show up as missed turning schedules, delayed wound assessment, or inconsistent documentation of skin checks.
Pressure ulcers may also worsen when residents experience dehydration, poor nutrition, infection, or limited mobility after hospitalization—issues that require proactive coordination between the nursing staff and the facility’s clinical team.


