Abstract: How to Involve and Energize the Bedside Nurse to Care and Feel Empowered to Make a Difference in Prevention of Pressure Ulcers (43rd Annual Conference (June 4-8, 2011))

5209 How to Involve and Energize the Bedside Nurse to Care and Feel Empowered to Make a Difference in Prevention of Pressure Ulcers

Ann Woodruff, BSN, WOCN, Rex Healthcare, WOCN Consult Service, Raleigh, NC and Vicky Overby, RN, BSN, MSN, CMSRN, Rex Healthcare, Clinical Nurse Specialist Medical Surgical Services, Raleigh, NC
Objectives:
  • Describe how the use of electronic health records can reduce hospital acquired pressure ulcers
  • Describe how implementation of a Skin and Wound Resource Team can effect unit-based practice change.

 

Purpose:

To implement preventive interventions and documentation of care so that efforts to prevent skin breakdown can easily be seen when documentation is reviewed. The National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel challenges us to prepare nurses with the minimum competencies for pressure ulcer prevention

 

Significance:

Hospital acquired pressure ulcers are a patient safety issue and millions of dollars are spent annually on prevention. An effective national approach begins with each facility. NDNQI accepts “rate of nosocomial pressure ulcers” as a valid measure of the quality of nursing care in a facility.

 

Strategy/Implementation:

The NPUAP guidelines were implemented in an acute care setting by identifying need for improvement via quarterly house-wide skin surveys to monitor hospital-acquired pressure ulcers and 'bed audits' to identify user problems with motorized beds. Based on these results, a Skin and Wound Resource Nurse Program was developed using a ‘train the trainer' approach. Nursing protocols, online training modules, annual competencies, and a skin and wound resource website related to skin assessment, management, and documentation was developed. Individualized unit-based 'Skin Rounds' provided one-on-one education and raised awareness for bedside nurses and nursing assistants. A 'Rapid Response Team' approach was implemented to address hospital acquired pressure ulcers identified by the electronic medical record. Multidisciplinary groups were involved in prevention strategies including Informatics, Dietary, Physical Therapy, OR, PACU, Environmental Services, Long Term Care, ED, Clinical Nurse Specialists, and Rehab Services.

 

Evaluation:

After 36 months, our quarterly hospital-acquired pressure ulcer results continuously improve, skin issues are identified earlier and at less severe stages, all RN’s and Nursing Assistants had one-on-one education, and Braden Scores and other documentation related to skin continue to improve.