AI Article Synopsis

  • ICU patients are at a higher risk of developing pressure ulcers compared to those in other care settings, prompting this study to identify specific clinical characteristics that could help prevent these ulcers.
  • The study monitored 210 ICU patients over a year, assessing various factors like age, length of hospitalization, and hemodialysis treatment, and found that older age and longer hospital stays significantly increased the risk of pressure ulcers.
  • Results suggest that certain clinical indicators, especially age, hospitalization duration, and hemodialysis treatment, are crucial for predicting the development of pressure ulcers in patients, emphasizing their importance in clinical practice.

Article Abstract

Aims And Objectives: It is widely recognized that Intensive Care Unit (ICU) patients have a greater likelihood of developing pressure ulcers in comparison to hospital or home care patients. Accordingly, this study aimed to evaluate whether specific clinical characteristics could be used as clinical indicators towards pressure ulcers prevention.

Method: We monitored 210 hospitalized ICU patients during a 12-month period. Pressure ulcers were assessed following the current guidelines. Clinical characteristics such as gender, age, hospitalized days, hemodialysis treatment, hematocrit, and serum albumin levels were considered as the most common predictors for pressure ulcers development. The significance of associations was controlled using multiple logistic regression after adjusting for clinical characteristics and was presented as adjusted odds ratio (AOR).

Results: The prevalence of pressure ulcers was 24.3%. Logistic regression revealed that patients with increased age AOR=1.04; (CI: 1.01-1.07) and last-long hospitalization AOR=1.17; (CI: 1.11-1.23) were significantly more likely to present pressure ulcers compared to the younger ones and patients with less length of stay, respectively. We also found that patients under hemodialysis treatment were more likely to present pressure ulcers AOR=4.09; (CI: 1.12-14.98) compared to patients that did not underwent hemodialysis and the risk of pressure ulcers development was decreased by 9% for every single unit of hematocrit value increase AOR=0.91; (CI: 0.82-0.99).

Conclusion: Our data analysis confirms that the clinical characteristics that were studied are independently associated with pressure ulcers development, and therefore, it is a crucial incentive to consider that these specific clinical characteristics are important indicators in the evidence-based practice.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5136439PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5455/medarh.2016.70.379-383DOI Listing

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