Families in the Brevard County area often describe a familiar pattern: staff explain that they’re “monitoring,” “waiting for redness to change,” or that the resident’s condition makes skin breakdown “inevitable.” But pressure ulcers are frequently preventable when a facility:
- follows risk screening at admission and during changes in condition
- documents skin assessments on schedule
- repositions residents correctly and consistently
- responds quickly when early redness or warmth appears
When those steps aren’t carried out, a minor warning can become a deeper injury requiring infection treatment, specialist care, or extended hospitalization.


