Wednesday, July 6, 2011
Thoughts on NDF Website
The New Jersey law requiring all nursing homes to replace all mattresses with pressure redistribution types represents the greatest hope for ending the scourge of bedsores in our lifetime. I am thinking of redoing the NDF website (decubitus.org) to concentrate on this factor, to convince other states to follow New Jersey's lead, to explain why the requirement must be extended to hospitals, and to raise funds to finance a campaign to educate the legislatures of 49 states.
Sunday, May 1, 2011
Promising New Mattress Overlay
We have recently been contacted by Low-G Technologies, LLC. They have developed a mattress overlay that has now undergone over 40,000 patient days of use without any hint of a pressure ulcer. We will watch the progress of this product carefully. This may be an ideal support suface for incorporation into the NDF Prevention Protocol.
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Medicare Publishes List of Worst Performing Hospitals
Medicare has just released the listing of hospitals ranked by their commission of medical errors, including pressure ulcers. This is an opportunity for the NDF to introduce the worst performers to the NDF Prevention Protocol, and to promise followup on future performance.
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Back from Las Vegas
We spent this past weekend in Las Vegas at the NPUAP 12th Biennial Conference. The NDF had been invited to make a poster presentation. Over 500 medical professionals were in attendance, and a large proportion of those visited our poster and learned about the NDF Prevention Protocol. About 70 attendees picked up a copy of our 2008 study, published in Advances in Skin & Wound Care, that laid the basis for the protocol. The NDF presentation will be posted on the website, www.decubitus.org, shortly.
One presentation from the stage provided some very encouraging news. The National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators, sponsored by the American Nursing Association, for the first time showed a meaningful reduction in hospital-acquired pressure ulcer (HAPU) incidence. Whereas the incidence for 2004 and 2006-207 held steady at 6.4%, 2010 showed a drop to 3.8% (2.7% excluding Stage 1 ulcers). The slides from this lecture and all of the other lectures can be viewed at http://npuap.org/conferences.htm.
We spoke with the bed manufacturers that displayed at the conference, and verified that many hospitals are investing in pressure reduction support surfaces for prevention purposes, thereby saving large amounts in rental costs. Other presentations, including one by Dr. Barbara Braden, indicated that on the order of 90% of hospitals are now assessing risk using the Braden Scale within the first 24 hours. Therefore we feel certain that the very welcome reduction in HAPU is due to the fact that some hospitals have adopted the NDF Prevention Protocol whether they realize it or not.
One presentation from the stage provided some very encouraging news. The National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators, sponsored by the American Nursing Association, for the first time showed a meaningful reduction in hospital-acquired pressure ulcer (HAPU) incidence. Whereas the incidence for 2004 and 2006-207 held steady at 6.4%, 2010 showed a drop to 3.8% (2.7% excluding Stage 1 ulcers). The slides from this lecture and all of the other lectures can be viewed at http://npuap.org/conferences.htm.
We spoke with the bed manufacturers that displayed at the conference, and verified that many hospitals are investing in pressure reduction support surfaces for prevention purposes, thereby saving large amounts in rental costs. Other presentations, including one by Dr. Barbara Braden, indicated that on the order of 90% of hospitals are now assessing risk using the Braden Scale within the first 24 hours. Therefore we feel certain that the very welcome reduction in HAPU is due to the fact that some hospitals have adopted the NDF Prevention Protocol whether they realize it or not.
Friday, February 18, 2011
Require Hospitals to Provide Safe Mattresses
There is now so much evidence that effective pressure reduction support surfaces result in greatly reduced pressure ulcer incidence rates that there can be no question that hospitals must not be allowed to cause bedsores by using inferior mattresses. All states should pass laws similar to New Jersey's requiring safe mattresses in nursing homes and hospitals. Education is a major focus of the NDF, and we must concentrate on educating state legislators about pressure ulcers and how they can take action to solve the problem.
Thursday, February 3, 2011
IHI Mentor Program
The Institute for Healthcare Improvement maintains a Mentor Hospital Registry. It can be reached from ihi.org by clicking on Programs, then Canpaign, then Mentor Registry. Twelve hospitals are listed under Pressure Ulcer Prevention, each of which has made great strides in reducing pressure ulcers, some to zero. All twelve list names of mentors along with phone numbers and email addresses. Nearly all mention purchase of new pressure-reducing surfaces as a factor in their success. I sent each an email asking what support surfaces they had purchased. Several responded, and the most mentioned surface was the HillRom VersaCare.
One of the slides for my NPUAP presentation lists hospitals that have achieved a zero level of pressure ulcer incidence, or close to it, with the heading, "If They Can Do It....."
One of the slides for my NPUAP presentation lists hospitals that have achieved a zero level of pressure ulcer incidence, or close to it, with the heading, "If They Can Do It....."
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Additional Sources
Today I located some wonderful references. First of all, a 2008 paper by Amit Gefen, PhD, finds that a pressure ulcer can be initiated in as short a time as one hour. This provides support to the essential element of the NDF Prevention Protocol that the at-risk patient must be placed on a pressure reducing surface immediately.
The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI.org) under their Programs section has a listing of hospitals that have made significant reductions in hospital-caused PU incidence, and that are willing to serve as mentors to other hospitals. All of them list new support surfaces as an essential element. I plan to ask each which support surface they procured.
The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI.org) under their Programs section has a listing of hospitals that have made significant reductions in hospital-caused PU incidence, and that are willing to serve as mentors to other hospitals. All of them list new support surfaces as an essential element. I plan to ask each which support surface they procured.
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