Patient repositioning and pressure ulcer risk - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Patient repositioning and pressure ulcer risk

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Patient repositioning and pressure ulcer risk Monitoring interface pressures of at-risk patients Matthew J. Peterson, PhD; Nikolaus Gravenstein, MD; – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Patient repositioning and pressure ulcer risk


1
Patient repositioning and pressure ulcer
riskMonitoring interface pressures of at-risk
patients
  • Matthew J. Peterson, PhD Nikolaus Gravenstein,
    MD Wilhelm K. Schwab, PhD Johannes H. van
    Oostrom, PhD Lawrence J. Caruso, MD

2
  • Aim
  • Examine the effect of routine repositioning over
    an extended time period on the interface
    pressures of the perisacral skin area of
    bedridden patients at risk for pressure ulcer
    formation using interface pressure mapping.
  • Relevance
  • Several recent studies in which repositioning was
    used as the primary intervention strategy failed
    to reduce the incidence of pressure ulcer
    formation .

3
Method
  • Used interface pressure mapping to assess how
    effectively routine repositioning relieves
    at-risk tissue of perisacral area.
  • Recorded perisacral skin-bed interface pressures
    of bedridden patients at risk for pressure ulcer
    formation every 30 s during routine repositioning
    care for 46 h.

4
Results
  • At-risk patients have skin areas that are likely
    always at risk throughout their hospital stay
    despite repositioning.
  • Skin areas that exceeded elevated pressure
    thresholds for gt95 of observation period
  • All participants (23) 206 182 cm2.
  • Participants observed in supine, turned left,
    turned right positions (13) 166 184 cm2.

5
Conclusion
  • Healthcare providers are unaware of actual
    tissue-relieving effectiveness (or lack thereof)
    of repositioning interventions.
  • May partially explain why pressure ulcer
    mitigation strategies are not always successful.
  • Relieving at-risk tissue is necessary part of
    pressure ulcer prevention, but repositioning
    practice itself needs improvement.
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