Venice is a community with a mix of retirement living, seasonal residents, and frequent transitions between hospitals and skilled nursing facilities. Those moves can compress timelines—admissions happen quickly, families are coordinating rides, and care teams may change.
In that environment, pressure ulcers can become a turning point when:
- A resident is discharged from a hospital in poor mobility condition and the facility’s prevention plan isn’t followed.
- Family members notice delays after bringing up concerns—like missed repositioning, slow wound evaluation, or inconsistent documentation.
- The resident’s care team changes disciplines (or shifts staffing) and risk monitoring doesn’t stay consistent.
A Venice-area lawyer looks closely at whether the facility treated the resident like a high-risk patient and responded promptly when skin changes appeared.


