In many Miami-area situations, families don’t realize a facility is struggling until the problem becomes visible. That may be because:
- You’re seeing your loved one during set visiting windows (and the earliest skin changes can be missed).
- Staffing patterns fluctuate around shift changes, weekends, or after admissions.
- Residents may have mobility limitations that require consistent turning, but the care you expect isn’t reflected clearly in day-to-day updates.
Pressure ulcers are often avoidable when a facility identifies skin risk early and follows through with turning schedules, skin checks, hygiene assistance, and wound care escalation when redness appears.


