Stuart is a coastal community with a high number of seasonal visitors and a broader caregiver workforce that can rotate across shifts. In real life, pressure ulcer cases often turn on operational realities—who was working, how often residents were checked, and whether documentation matched the care that was supposed to occur.
Families commonly report patterns such as:
- Inconsistent turning assistance (especially for residents who are hard to transfer or require two-person help)
- Delayed responses after you raise concerns—like “redness that won’t go away” or a wound that seems to be worsening
- Gaps between wound assessments and the next documented step in treatment
- Care plan changes that aren’t reflected in the day-to-day notes
Your attorney’s job is to translate those day-to-day gaps into a legal case: what the facility owed, what it did (or didn’t do), and how that failure contributed to the injury.


