Pressure ulcers aren’t just a “skin problem.” They often indicate that a resident’s risk was not managed correctly—especially when someone has limited mobility, poor sensation, or needs help with turning, hygiene, and nutrition.
In Ocala and throughout Florida, nursing home residents frequently cycle through care settings—home health, rehab, skilled nursing, and back again. Those transitions matter because records are created in multiple places, and a delayed or incomplete handoff can make it harder to understand when the injury truly began.
That’s why families should treat a suspected bedsores case as time-sensitive: early documentation and a tight timeline can be critical to showing that the facility’s response fell short of what residents reasonably should receive.


