The state of wound assessment tools in Singapore: an evaluation study.

Br J Nurs

Lecturer, Alice Lee Centre for Nursing Studies, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore.

Published: June 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Variations in wound assessment and documentation persist among clinicians in Singapore, highlighting the need for better standardization, despite the existence of national guidelines like the WCA-MDS.
  • The study evaluated a selection of well-established and locally-designed wound assessment tools (WATs) against WCA-MDS criteria, revealing that only five out of fifteen tools met over 50% of the standards.
  • Key deficiencies noted include a lack of attention to 'patient information' and 'specialist's referral' sections, signaling a need for improved clinician training and the development of a nationally-approved WAT.

Article Abstract

Objective: Variations in wound assessment and documentation remain an issue for clinicians despite efforts to standardise practices using national guidelines such as the Wound Care Assessment Minimum Data Set (WCA-MDS). As little is known about the quality of the wound assessment tools (WATs) used in Singapore, this study aimed to determine whether the existing WATs used meet the WCA-MDS criteria and clinicians' needs.

Method: The study adopted an action evaluation methodology to evaluate seven well-established WATs, such as the Applied Wound Management (AWM) and National Wound Assessment Form (NWAF), and eight locally-designed WATs against the 34-item WCA-MDS criteria. Two clinicians reviewed the WATs using a self-developed audit form between June and July 2020.

Results: The results show that only five WATs met at least 50% of the 34 criteria indicators, with the MEASURE assessment framework achieving the most at 68%, followed by TIME-CDST at 65%, Hospital C WAT at 56%, NWAF at 53%, and AWM form at 50%. The five most common criteria indicators included wound type/classification, date and time of wound, wound size, wound bed tissue type, and exudate information. Most criteria indicators under the 'patient information' and 'specialist's referral' subdomains were omitted, reflecting the lack of focus on these areas in the local WATs.

Conclusion: Despite advances in WAT development in the literature, the current state of wound assessment and documentation across healthcare institutions remains inconsistent. There is a need to focus on clinician training and establishing a nationally-validated WAT in Singapore.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/bjon.2022.31.12.S18DOI Listing

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