| Literature DB >> 35990777 |
Johan Nyman1,2, Stefan Acosta1,2, Christina Monsen1,3,4, Julien Hasselmann1, Francis Rezk1,5, Ann-Christine Andersson6,7.
Abstract
The PICO™ dressing utilizes incisional negative pressure wound therapy in reducing surgical site infection after vascular surgery; however, no patient-reported investigations are available. The objective was to explore patientś experiences wearing the PICO™ dressing for 7 days. Nine men and 6 women were interviewed, and analysis was conducted using qualitative content analysis. The PICO™ dressing system was well accepted by most patients. Most prominent problems were fear of dropping the pump to the floor, lack of information, and initial feelings of uncertainty. Four patients who had the PICO™ and standard dressing in opposite groins simultaneously, preferred the PICO™ dressing.Entities:
Keywords: dressing; incision; negative pressure wound therapy; patients’ experience; surgical site infection; vascular surgery
Year: 2022 PMID: 35990777 PMCID: PMC9386841 DOI: 10.1177/23743735221112595
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Patient Exp ISSN: 2374-3735
Figure 1.Patient undergoing bilateral thrombendarterectomy (TEA) of the common femoral artery in the randomized controlled trial (clinical trials.gov; NCT01913132). The PICO™ dressing system (Smith & Nephew, London, UK) was applied above the closed incision in the right groin. The pump (thin black arrow) provides continuous negative pressure to the PICO™ dressing pad (thick black arrow) through an interconnecting tube (thick white arrow). The standard dressing (Aquacel®, Convatec, Inc, and a transparent film dressing [Tegaderm™ Film, 3 M]) was applied above the closed incision in the left groin (thin white arrow). (Courtesy of F. Rezk, Unit of Vascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, Jönköping, Sweden).
Figure 2.The 2 themes and 5 subthemes identified from the analysis.