viernes, 27 de mayo de 2011

Resources | Partnership for Patients | Healthcare.gov | HealthCare.gov

New AHRQ Toolkit Helps to Prevent Hospital-Acquired Pressure Ulcers

AHRQ’s new Web-based resource can assist hospital staff in implementing effective pressure ulcer prevention practices through an interdisciplinary approach to care. The toolkit, Preventing Pressure Ulcers in Hospitals, provides links to tools that outline a step-by-step hospital-based initiative to target interventions in those areas where patient care processes have shown the most risks to patient skin integrity. Pressure ulcers acquired during acute care hospital stays present significant treatment and recovery delays for patients. Hospitals can tailor the toolkit to meet their needs to implement new strategies and to track, record, and assess progress in pressure ulcer management. According to AHRQ’s Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project, the costs for adults in U.S. hospitals treated for pressure ulcers developed prior to admission or hospital-acquired is more than $11 billion dollars a year. Preventing Pressure Ulcers in Hospitals Toolkit is included as a resource in the new Partnership for Patients, a public-private program to improve patient safety
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Resources | Partnership for Patients | Healthcare.gov | HealthCare.gov


Preventing Pressure Ulcers in Hospitals
A Toolkit for Improving Quality of Care




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Each year, more than 2.5 million people in the United States develop pressure ulcers. These skin lesions bring pain, associated risk for serious infection, and increased health care utilization. The aim of this toolkit is to assist hospital staff in implementing effective pressure ulcer prevention practices through an interdisciplinary approach to care.

Select for print version of manual: (PDF File, 1.4 MB, 156 pages [http://www.ahrq.gov/research/ltc/pressureulcertoolkit/putoolkit.pdf] [PDF Help]; Word® File, 830 KB [Word® Viewer ]);

Print version of tools: (PDF File, 620 KB, 63 pages [PDF Help], Word® File, 1 MB [Word® Viewer ]).
http://www.ahrq.gov/research/ltc/pressureulcertoolkit/putoolssect7.pdf

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Prepared by: Dan Berlowitz, M.D., M.P.H.; Bedford VA Hospital and Boston University School of Public Health; Carol VanDeusen Lukas, Ed.D.; VA Boston Healthcare System and Boston University School of Public Health; Victoria Parker, Ed.M.; D.B.A.; Andrea Niederhauser, M.P.H.; Jason Silver, M.P.H.; and Caroline Logan, M.P.H.; Boston University School of Public Health; Elizabeth Ayello, Ph.D., RN, APRN, BC, CWOCN, FAPWCA, FAAN, Excelsior College School of Nursing, Albany, New York; and Karen Zulkowski, D.N.S., RN, CWS, Montana State University-Bozeman.

Contents
Acknowledgments
Overview
1. Are we ready for this change?
1.1 Do organizational members understand why change is needed?
1.2 Is there urgency to change?
1.3 Does senior administrative leadership support this initiative?
1.4 Who will take ownership of this effort?
1.5 What kinds of resources are needed?
1.6 What if we are not ready?
1.7 Checklist for assessing readiness for change
2. How will we manage change?
2.1 How can we set up the Implementation Team for success?
2.2 What needs to change and how do we need to redesign it?
2.3 How should goals and plans for change be developed?
2.4 Checklist for managing change
3. What are the best practices in pressure ulcer prevention that we want to use?
3.1 What bundle of best practices do we use?
3.2 How should a comprehensive skin assessment be conducted?
3.3 How should a standardized pressure ulcer risk assessment be conducted?
3.4 How should pressure ulcer care planning based on identified risk be used?
3.5 What items should be in our bundle?
3.6 What additional resources are available to identify best practices for pressure ulcer prevention?
3.7 Checklist for best practices
4. How do we implement best practices in our organization?
4.1 What roles and responsibilities will staff have in preventing pressure ulcers?
4.2 What pressure ulcer practices go beyond the unit?
4.3 How do we put the new practices into operation?
4.4 Checklist for implementing best practices
5. How do we measure our pressure ulcer rates and practices?
5.1 Measuring pressure ulcer rates
5.2 Measuring key processes of care
5.3 Checklist for measuring progress
6. How do we sustain the redesigned prevention practices?
6.1 Who will be responsible for sustaining active pressure ulcer prevention efforts on an ongoing basis?
6.2 What types of ongoing organizational support do we need to keep the new practices in place?
6.3 How can we reinforce the desired results?
6.4 Summary and plan for moving forward
7. Tools and Resources
Key Subject Area Index

This project was funded under contract number HHSA 290200600012 TO #5 from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The opinions expressed in this document are those of the authors and do not reflect the official position of AHRQ or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Additional support was provided through the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs under grant # RRP 09-112.

Acknowledgments
The development of this toolkit was facilitated by the assistance of quality improvement teams at six medical centers: Billings Clinic, Boston Medical Center, Denver Health Medical Center, Montefiore Medical Center, VA Connecticut Healthcare System (West Haven Campus) and VA North Texas Healthcare System (Dallas Campus). We thank them for their valuable contributions. We also thank Barbara Bates Jensen, Ph.D., RN; Sharon Baranoski, M.S.N., RN, CWCN, APN, FAAN; Joy Edvalson, M.S.N., RN, FNP, CWOCN; Aline Holmes, M.S.N., RN; Diane Langemo, Ph.D., RN, FAAN; Courtney Lyder, Ph.D., RN; and George Taler, M.D., for their advice on this document.


AHRQ Publication No. 11-0053-EF
Current as of April 2011


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Internet Citation:

Preventing Pressure Ulcers in Hospitals: A Toolkit for Improving Quality of Care. AHRQ Publication No. 11-0053-EF, April 2011. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/research/ltc/pressureulcertoolkit/

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full-contents:
Preventing Pressure Ulcers in Hospitals: A Toolkit for Improving Quality of Care

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