Drs. Tschannen and Anderson share several best practices that can help you tailor pressure-injury prevention efforts to individual patients:
• Empowered nurses. You can’t underestimate the role nurses play is the prevention of pressure injuries, says Dr. Tschannen, who believes some prevention protocols don’t necessarily give OR nurses the autonomy they
need to successfully address the issue at the point of care. “They’re the ones who are there, doing the assessments and implementing the interventions,” she says.
• Thorough assessments. One of the primary ways to empower your nurses is to provide them with the right tools to conduct more thorough assessments that account for the broad range of factors that put patients at an increased risk
for a pressure injury. The assessment process is crucial, whether you use the Scott Triggers Scale, the CMUNRO scale or the PIPM. “Surgical patients are three times more likely to develop a pressure injury than non-surgical patients.
This in combination with the presence of multiple comorbidities or chronic conditions makes them 13 times more likely to develop an injury,” says Dr. Tschannen. “However, at many outpatient facilities, these additional risk
factors aren’t accounted for properly. What we’re trying to achieve is a more personalized predictive model.”
Simply looking at skin pressure and tissue profusion might not be enough, says Dr. Tschannen. “If you have a patient coming in for a procedure, are you capturing information around their comorbidities? Are you thinking about the type
of surgery and the amount of time they’ll be on the OR table? Are you thinking about padding potential pressure points to protect the skin?”
• Tailored interventions. By accounting for multiple risk factors, you’ll be able to preemptively react to mitigate patients’ pressure injury risk factors. One example Dr. Tschannen offers is the patient with an extremely
low BMI, which tends to get less focus than patients with high BMIs. “If a patient has a very low BMI, consider how you would pad that patient during the intraoperative phase to protect their bony prominences.” One caution
when it comes to padding patients: Avoid overdoing it. “Too much padding can increase the interface pressure or cause the body to be out of alignment,” says Dr. Anderson.
• Continual surveillance. After the initial preoperative assessment, nurses must continue to closely monitor patients through the remainder of the perioperative process. “Surveillance is one of the major interventions we
have at our disposal,” says Dr. Anderson. “It’s that ability to say, ‘OK, we’ve got a red spot developing on the skin there. We need to watch that.’”
Dr. Anderson also notes that increased surveillance is especially important given the higher rates of pressure injuries she’s seen stemming from medical devices. According to the Joint Commission in 2018, medical device-related pressure
injuries accounted for more than 30% of hospital-acquired pressure injuries. A major culprit: oxygen tubing. In fact, research shows that oxygen tubing placed around the ears has long been associated with pressure injuries. It’s an injury that occurs frequently enough to be referred to as a “bedsore of the ear,” so providers must make it a point to regularly check this pressure-injury-prone
area on their patients and be ready to intervene before the issue occurs.
The vast majority of pressure injuries are preventable.
— Dana Tschannen, PhD, RN
• Evidence-based guidance. Foam and gel-based positioning aids are readily available, but it’s important to use only products that meet evidence-based standards. “Just because a new positioning aid has been developed
by a company doesn’t mean it meets all proper standards,” says Dr. Anderson.
The standards and protocols for pressure injury prevention can also change over time, says Dr. Anderson, who recommends that surgical leaders regularly review their facilities’ protocols and keep up with what the experts’ best
practices. “You need to follow the evidence and adhere to standard recommended practices,” she says.