| Literature DB >> 27708825 |
Peter R Worsley1, Glenn Smith2, Lisette Schoonhoven3, Dan L Bader1.
Abstract
AIM: The study aimed to characterize demographic and clinical practice factors associated with community (CAPU) and hospital acquired pressure ulcers (HAPU).Entities:
Keywords: Community acquired; hospital acquired; pressure ulcer; prevalence
Year: 2016 PMID: 27708825 PMCID: PMC5047347 DOI: 10.1002/nop2.50
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Open ISSN: 2054-1058
Description of patients who were at risk but did not acquire a pressure ulcer (No PU), had a community acquired pressure ulcer (CAPU) and those who developed a pressure ulcer during admission (HAPU)
| No. of Patients | % of PUs | Age (years) mean ± SD | Male (%) | Length of stay (days) median (range) | Peak Waterlow mean ± SD | Mattress within 24hr | Intervals between Risk Assess (days) mean ± SD | Location number (percentage) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sacrum | Heel | Buttock | Elbow | Other | |||||||||
| No PU | 3851 | NA | 74 ± 13.0 | 44 | 4(0‐229) | 15.2±4.2 | 98% | 3.7 ±5.9 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Category 1 | CAPU (n=916) | 70% | 79.0 ± 11.5 | 43 | 5 (1‐235) | 18.2±4.8 | 89% | 3.5 ±4.8 | 650 (71%) | 46 (5%) | 211 (23%) | 9 (1%) | 3 (0%) |
| HAPU (n=696) | 50% | 80.4 ± 11.6 | 44 | 10 (1‐186) | 20.6±5.3 | 80% | 4.2 ±5.7 | 362 (52%) | 244 (35%) | 21 (3%) | 42 (6%) | 28 (4%) | |
| Category 2 | CAPU (n=238) | 20% | 80.9 ± 12.0 | 44 | 7(1‐138) | 21.4±5.1 | 73% | 4.3 ±5.5 | 183 (77%) | 19 (8%) | 26 (11%) | 5 (2%) | 6 (3%) |
| HAPU (n=510) | 36% | 80.6 ± 11.1 | 45 | 11(1‐169) | 20.9±4.4 | 72% | 4.3 ±7.2 | 332 (65%) | 97 (19%) | 36 (7%) | 15 (3%) | 31 (6%) | |
| Category 3 | CAPU (n=96) | 8% | 82.3 ± 12.4 | 33 | 9(0‐126) | 24.4±4.8 | 34% | 4.6 ±4.4 | 72 (75%) | 4 (4%) | 12 (12%) | 4 (4%) | 5 (6%) |
| HAPU (n=160) | 12% | 82.0 ± 9.6 | 45 | 18(0‐205) | 23.4±3.5 | 54% | 5.3 ±7.0 | 107 (67%) | 30 (19%) | 8 (5%) | 3 (2%) | 11 (7%) | |
| Category 4 | CAPU (n=20) | 2% | 76.1 ± 12.5 | 20 | 7(1‐87) | 25.7±3.2 | 59% | 5.0 ±8.9 | 15 (77%) | 4 (19%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (3%) |
| HAPU (n=32) | 2% | 73.9 ± 13.2 | 58 | 15(1‐193) | 26.9±2.9 | 47% | 4.2 ±3.7 | 12 (37%) | 15 (48%) | 2 (5%) | 2 (5%) | 1 (3%) | |
| All Categories | CAPU (n=1267) | 79.6 ± 11.7 | 42 | 6(1‐235) | 18.9 ±5.1 | 81% | 3.7 ±5.0 | 920 (73%) | 63 (6%) | 251 (19%) | 18 (1%) | 15 (1%) | |
| HAPU (n=1398) | 80.5 ± 11.3 | 45 | 11(1‐205) | 21.0 ±5.0 | 73% | 4.3 ±6.4 | 813 (58%) | 376 (28%) | 67 (5%) | 62 (4%) | 71 (5%) | ||
Patient given a pressure redistributing mattress within 24 hours of being deemed at risk of a pressure ulcer (Waterlow >10)
Figure 1Peak Waterlow scores (mean, standard deviation) from patients with no pressure ulcers, hospital acquired pressure ulcers (HAPU) and community acquired pressure ulcer (CAPU) groups. Results are shown for each category of pressure ulcer (1–4) for the CAPU and HAPU groups.
Figure 2Length of hospital stay (median, inter‐quartile range box and whisper plots) from patients with no pressure ulcers, hospital acquired pressure ulcers (HAPU) and community acquired pressure ulcer (CAPU) groups. Results are shown for each category of pressure ulcer (1–4) for the CAPU and HAPU groups.