In Ocoee, many seniors receive care at skilled nursing and long-term care centers that serve residents from surrounding communities across Central Florida. Pressure ulcers can develop when a facility doesn’t consistently manage residents who are:
- mostly immobile (bedbound or chair-bound for long stretches)
- recovering from surgery or serious illness
- dealing with incontinence or skin breakdown from moisture
- experiencing poor nutrition, dehydration, or reduced sensation
Families commonly spot issues indirectly—not through medical terminology, but through patterns like:
- staff not responding promptly after you report redness or “a sore starting”
- missed or delayed turning/repositioning
- inconsistent assistance with hygiene
- wound care visits that seem late compared to when the problem was first raised
When the injury is preventable, the legal question becomes whether the facility provided the level of care a reasonable nursing home should have provided for that resident’s risk level.


