In South Florida, families often assume that once a loved one is placed in a facility, daily care will be consistent and well-documented. But pressure ulcers can develop when basic prevention doesn’t happen the way it should.
Common local scenarios we see in claims involving nursing home residents include:
- High turnover or understaffing leading to missed turning schedules and delayed skin checks
- Care plan instructions not followed in practice, even when the plan exists in the record
- Delayed wound escalation, such as not consulting wound specialists when a sore worsens
- Gaps in documentation, where skin assessments appear incomplete or inconsistent
Pressure ulcers aren’t just “skin irritation.” They can signal breakdowns in repositioning, hygiene support, moisture control, nutrition monitoring, and early intervention.


