scholarly journals A prediction tool for hospital‐acquired pressure ulcers among surgical patients: Surgical pressure ulcer risk score

2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 164-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fazila Aloweni ◽  
Shin Yuh Ang ◽  
Stephanie Fook‐Chong ◽  
Nurliyana Agus ◽  
Patricia Yong ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 88
Author(s):  
Punitha Singh ◽  
Deepti Damodaran ◽  
Gaurav Thukral ◽  
Joseph P. C.

Hospital-Acquired Pressure Ulcers (HAPU) are serious clinical complications that can lead to increased length of stay, pain, infection, and, potentially, death. Unfortunately, a large proportion of home care clients received from hospital present with pressure ulcer that varies from stage 1 to stage 4.  Home care nurses have an opportunity to manipulate favorably certain environmental factors that can prevent pressure ulcers from newly developing or to manage effective treatment plans for any stages ulcers which were present while onboarding.Objective: The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence, duration and outcome in terms of healing; worsening of pressure ulcers and the ones whose condition remained the same seeking home health services. The study also describes the home care nursing interventions done to minimize the risk of worsening of pressure ulcer.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cynthia Ruggiero

<p>Accurate assessment and documentation of skin is an important nursing activity yet the task of identifying and documenting wounds can be difficult. New regulations from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid dictate that hospitals will not receive payment for the treatment of stage III or stage IV hospital-acquired pressure ulcers. Literature supports that accurate assessment and documentation of a pressure ulcer is important to the care of the patient, to provide legal documentation, and for reimbursement. The purpose of this project was to develop and implement a pressure ulcer assessment and documentation pocket guide. The development of the pocket guide was guided by Malcolm Knowles’ adult learning theory and developed by evaluating different pocket guides, the NPUAP website, and evidence based literature. The project employed an intervention, post intervention evaluation design. The sample was drawn from nurse members of the Pressure Ulcer Prevalence Committee at the Miriam Hospital in Providence, RI. Nurse members of the committee who agreed to participate utilized the Pressure Ulcer Assessment and Documentation Pocket Guide to assess patients during the monthly meeting and then completed an evaluation. The guide was evaluated as being valuable in assessing and documenting pressure ulcers and it was recommended for distribution to staff nurses. Use of the tool has the potential to improve assessment, identification, and documentation of pressure ulcers. Implications for advanced practice are discussed.</p>


Author(s):  
Deborah Glover ◽  
Trevor Jones ◽  
Henning von Spreckelsen

The heel of the foot is particularly susceptible to pressure, friction and shear forces. In consequence, heel pressure ulcers account for approximately 18% of all hospital-acquired pressure ulcers in England. To ameliorate the effects of friction and shear forces, the use of heel protectors made from silk-like fabric is recommended. This article outlines how one such product, the Parafricta bootee (APA Parafricta), has facilitated a reduction in heel pressure ulcer development, resulting in both time and cost savings in an acute NHS trust over the course of 8 years and thousands of patients. A cost-analysis will also be detailed to show that if the products and processes pioneered by this trust were used throughout NHS England, over £300 million in resource savings could be achieved each year.


2020 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-41
Author(s):  
Claudia Elena Dobre ◽  
Florin Cătălin Cîrstoiu ◽  
Mariana Zazu ◽  
Doina Carmen Mazilu

AbstractThe study was performed in seven medical units in Bucharest with the intention to offer a comprehensive analysis of the nurses’ current prevention practices for hospital-acquired pressure ulcers and also to determine: (1) the main risks that can negatively affect the prevention activities for this type of injury, and (2) if there is a correlation between the nurses’ knowledge and the clinical approach to the current hospital-acquired pressure ulcer prevention practices. The statistical analysis was based on data collected from 713 questionnaires from subjects who met the inclusion criteria of the study. The results showed that nurses considered protocols for hospital-acquired pressure ulcer prevention and its management to be important, but both were not always fully implemented into practice due to the lack of resources, time allocation and staff shortages. The regression analysis method we used was focused to assess the predictive capacity for the combined clinical knowledge and professional approaches to hospital-acquired pressure ulcer prevention and management. The conclusion was that a simultaneous improvement in the clinical approaches and professional knowledge on the topic of pressure-ulcer prevention and management may lead to an improvement of up to 6% of the practices in this field according to the results of the statistical analysis performed.


2013 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 32-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judy C. Paull, ◽  
Patricia Hanson, ◽  
Susan Hasenau, ◽  
Deborah Dunn,

The Nyberg Caring Assessment Scale (NCA) and the National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators (NDNQI) were used to measure nurse caring and hospital acquired pressure ulcers. This is an exploratory, descriptive, single-site study conducted in a large academic, trauma center, twice Magnet® designated in the southeast United States. Caring theory, the mechanics of pressure ulcer development, and wound prevalence between medical-surgical and critical care units was explored. No statistically significant differences in caring scores were identified between nurse groups, although pressure ulcer prevalence differed. Existing high standards of care and the tool itself are noted as factors influencing the results.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. e2099
Author(s):  
Raysa Cabrejo ◽  
Sifon Ndon ◽  
Ean Saberski ◽  
Carolyn Chuang ◽  
Henry C. Hsia

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