Improving Vascular Access Dressing Integrity in the Acute Care Setting: A Quality Improvement Project.

J Wound Ostomy Continence Nurs

Michelle DeVries, MPH, CIC, VA-BC, Methodist Hospitals, Gary, Indiana, and AVATAR Group, Menzies Health Institute, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia.

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The quality improvement project aimed to assess how transparent vascular access dressings and a liquid gum mastic adhesive affect the integrity of dressings at peripheral intravenous insertion sites while minimizing skin injuries.
  • A multidisciplinary team reviewed existing data and conducted trials in two Indiana hospitals over a 2-week period using four different dressing protocols to find the most effective method.
  • The results showed that using the gum mastic adhesive significantly improved dressing integrity, allowing 80% of dressings to remain intact after 7 days without any skin injuries, leading to a change in standard care practice at the institution.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this quality improvement project was to evaluate transparent vascular access dressings and the use of a liquid gum mastic adhesive on improving dressing integrity over peripheral intravenous (PIV) insertion sites without increasing medical adhesive-related skin injuries (MARSIs) such as tears.

Participants And Setting: A multidisciplinary team consisting of specialists in infection prevention, vascular access, nursing professional development, materials management, and WOC nurses met to review current audit data and available products to trial on 2 intermediate care units in our 2 hospitals in Indiana with a combined average daily unit census of 35 patients.

Approach: Four dressing protocols-including our existing dressing with education, and an updated dressing with education, and the updated and new dressing, both with education and the addition of a gum mastic adhesive agent-were sequentially implemented by nurses on the units, each over a 2-week period. The goal was for 80% of the dressings to remain with all 4 corners fully intact without reinforcement at day 7, or sooner if PIV was discontinued before day 7. Data were reported as frequencies for intact dressings and skin complications.

Outcomes: Education combined with the original dressing and the updated dressing did not achieve the goal of 80% fully intact dressings in the samples evaluated. The addition of the adhesive agent to the updated and new dressings with education exceeded the 80% goal. In addition, there were zero exposed PIV insertion sites and no documented MARSI in any of the 4 protocols.

Implications For Practice: We continued to collect postproject data of 30,049 vascular access sites including central line catheters and observed the same effectiveness of incorporating a gum mastic adhesive on dressing integrity. This practice change has now become standard of care in our institution.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8415728PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/WON.0000000000000787DOI Listing

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