Ostomy/wound management
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Ostomy/wound management · Feb 2006
Comparative StudyPressure ulcers in German nursing homes and acute care hospitals: prevalence, frequency, and ulcer characteristics.
In German healthcare facilities, research-based knowledge of pressure ulcers and their relation to patient characteristics is limited. To provide information for national and international comparison on pressure ulcers and related issues, two cross-sectional surveys were conducted among 21,574 German hospital patients and nursing home residents (147 institutions total) in 2002 and 2003. Prevalence and frequency rates of pressure ulcers in people at risk (Braden score of =20) in different institution types were compared and descriptive data on severity, location, history, and origin of 3,857 wounds were analyzed to examine the relationship between age, body mass index, and Braden score and the frequency and severity of wounds. ⋯ In hospital patients and nursing home residents, 7.4% and 29.7% of wounds, respectively, had existed for more than 3 months. The studies also found that persons with lower Braden scale scores had more ulcers and more severe pressure ulcers. Analysis of wounds in this large patient population provides more detailed information about the problem of pressure ulcers and should help improve prevention and treatment.
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Ostomy/wound management · Feb 2006
Implementing a pressure ulcer prevention program and enhancing the role of the CWOCN: impact on outcomes.
Hospitals in the US are increasingly concerned with the rising number of hospital-acquired pressure ulcers. To reduce its 2002-2003 average hospital-acquired pressure ulcer prevalence rate of 9.2%, a regional medical center in southeastern US initiated a process improvement and education program. Quarterly pressure ulcer prevalence studies were conducted and the Medical Intensive Care Unit was found to have the highest number of hospital-acquired pressure ulcers among the five units participating in the study. ⋯ Implementing these changes resulted in a decrease in the quarterly hospital-acquired pressure ulcer prevalence in participating units, including the Medical Intensive Care Unit where rates dropped from a high of 29% to near 0%. Clinicians now approach pressure ulcers as preventable rather than inevitable and view Certified Wound Ostomy Continence Nurses as resources and clinical experts for prevention and treatment. Overall quality of care and financial resource utilization also have substantially improved.