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Pressure Ulcer Prevention. Habersham Medical Center Tallulah Falls Community Group For Regional Two/B. Habersham Medical Center. Acute Care Hospital Licensed for 53 Beds. Long Term Care for 84 Residents HCMC Home Health Agency Six Physician Practice Offices Community Wellness Program.
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Pressure Ulcer Prevention Habersham Medical Center Tallulah Falls Community Group For Regional Two/B
Habersham Medical Center • Acute Care Hospital Licensed for 53 Beds. • Long Term Care for 84 Residents • HCMC Home Health Agency • Six Physician Practice Offices • Community Wellness Program
Mission Statement • Habersham Medical Center’s mission is to provide high quality caring a compassionate, professional and economical manner to all persons in Habersham County and adjacent areas.
In the beginning… • Acknowledging We Had A Problem
Listened to our Community • Data did not reflect a need to focus on pressure ulcer prevention. • Identified physician documentation did not routinely include skin assessments and findings. • Available data came from coding from physician documentation only. • Formulated a multidisciplinary Wound Care Team. • Hosted our Tallulah Falls Community meeting with GMCF to address community pressure ulcers.
Tallulah Fall Meeting • Met our neighbors to put a face with a name. • Shared preventive measure ideas. • Show and tell for preventive and treatment supplies. • Rep demo tables with available products. • Provide one number to call for all concerns for new admissions that came from HMC.
One Phone Number 706-754-3113 Ext: 1121 • This one step was the one step we took that really made a difference. • Gave us real data on pressure ulcers. • Gave HMC real time information to review the patient’s care to see what we could have done differently. • Learned from our lost opportunities. • Peer pressure knowing that everyone was looking, reporting, and reviewing.
Formulated Our Team • Physical Therapy • Acute Care Nursing (Med/Surg, ICU, OR) • Material Management • Infection Prevention • Information Technology • Long Term Care Nursing • Home Health Administration • Hospital Administration • Medical Staff to include: • Orthopedics & General Surgery
Started In The Basement… • Infection Prevention and Material Management leaders took inventory of all skin prevention and treatment products stocked for all areas. • Reviewed our contracted options. • Contracted companies and trialed products in LTC. • Completed cost analysis on products; contract vs. non contract products. • Approved products and educated staff and Medical Staff.
GOAL- Evaluate Products • Step One…
Step Four • DO: • Describe what actually happened when you ran the test of change. • Clear understanding of products stocked and how to use them. • Medical Staff educated for the need of documentation for pressure ulcers overall, to include POA. • Medical Staff educated on products stocked and how to use them. • Trialed different heel boots with no success.
Step Five • STUDY: • Describe the measured results and how they compare to the predicted results. • Staff accepted the change of culture and appreciated the team clearing the confusion related to products. • Medical Staff struggled with the culture change focusing on skin and the importance of documentation and assuring the proper products were being used on the patients. • Unexpected barrier with “Boots” to protect the heels. Trials multiple products that took 18 months to finalize the preferred product.
Step Six • ACT- • Describe what changes to the plan will be made for the next cycle from what you learned • Continue to monitor or someone will change it without you knowing it… • Set expectations and follow them closely. • Share the responsibility so all team members are engaged. • It is not what you expect as much as what you inspect.
Continue to monitor outcomes until you find your facilities solution
Community Skin Evaluation Assessment • Tallulah Falls Community Meeting • Braden Scale • Staging of ulcerations • Flow chart different terminology of ulceration • Understanding why certain facilities use different scales and terms.
Friction Injury Skin Tear Talking the same talk! Stage II Pressure Ulcer Partial Thickness Burn
Wound Rounds • Long Term Care implemented weekly Wound Rounds to include Nursing, Physical Therapy, and Medical Staff. • Implemented Acute Care Wound Rounds- • Started small on one unit, Surgical Unit one day a week at the same time with PT and Nursing • Added ICU to Wound Rounds on Wednesday mornings at 0800. • Graduated to doing Wound Rounds weekly on all units.
Wound Education • Annual wound education for all clinical staff. • Demonstrate products and evaluate the staffs knowledge of proper use. • Creative games using scavenger hunt approach. • Convetec and Medline Reps available to answer questions for products. • Chained wound booklets to each nursing area as a reference • Provided Pressure Point Pocket Cards from GMCF
Sometimes the problem is bigger than you can fix! • Remembering to stick to the basics before progressing is difficult. We always want to fix everything at once. • Remember time is on your side… • How did our Long Term Care facilities get to zero doing the same things Acute Care is doing?
Administrative Involvement • Don’t assume they know what you need. • Make sure they understand the financial impact and most importantly the impact it has on the patient’s outcome. • Replaced chairs in patient rooms. • Replaced mattresses and beds.
In addition • Hourly Rounding. • Annual Nursing Tech Education to include pressure ulcer prevention. • Wound Vac Certification for Nursing. • Adding POA to our morning rounds with Medical Staff. • Revised documentation in Meditech 6.0 for Wounds • Deleted all TED Hose facility wide.
In conclusion… • HMC has eliminated HAC Pressure Ulcerations for nine months. • Evaluate documentation and preventive measures taken on each call received from community. • Use information to continued education. • Provide referred facilities with review findings. • Last known pressure ulcer was August 2011 from a device placed on the patient’s leg. Reviewed the product and usage with Medical Staff and employees. • Take the time and opportunity to learn from your reviews.