Padula William V, Valuck Robert J, Makic Mary Beth F, Wald Heidi L
William V. Padula, PhD, MS, Section of Hospital Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois. Robert J. Valuck, PhD, RPh, Department of Clinical Pharmacy, Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Colorado, Aurora, Colorado. Mary Beth F. Makic, PhD, RN, Critical Care, University of Colorado Hospital, Aurora, Colorado. Heidi L. Wald, MD, MSPH, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado.
J Wound Ostomy Continence Nurs. 2015 Jul-Aug;42(4):327-30. doi: 10.1097/WON.0000000000000145.
Recent data show a decrease in hospital-acquired pressure ulcers (PUs) throughout US hospitals; these changes may be associated with increased success in implementing evidence-based practices for PU prevention. The purpose of this study was to identify wound care nurse perceptions of the primary factors that influenced the overall reduction of PUs.
Cross-sectional descriptive survey.
Surveys were sent to wound care nurses at 98 University HealthSystem Consortium (UHC) hospitals. The UHC consists of more than 120 academic medical centers and affiliated facilities across the United States. Responses solicited from this survey represented a geographically diverse set of hospitals from less than 200 beds to more than 1000 beds.
The survey questionnaire used a framework of 7 internal and 5 external influential factors for implementing evidence-based practices for PU prevention. Internal influential factors queried included availability of nurse specialists, high nursing job turnover, high PU rates, and prevention campaigns. External influential factors included data sharing, Medicare nonpayment policy, and applications for Magnet recognition.
Hospital-acquired PU prevention experts at UHC hospitals were contacted through the Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nurses Society membership directory to complete the questionnaire. Consenting participants were e-mailed a disclosure and online questionnaire; they were also sent monthly reminders until they either responded to the survey or declined participation.
Fifty-five respondents (59% response rate) indicated several internal factors that influenced evidence-based practice: hospital prevention campaigns; the availability of nursing specialists; and the level of preventive knowledge among hospital staff. External influential factors included financial concerns; application for Magnet recognition; data sharing among peer institutions; and regulatory issues.
These findings suggest that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services nonpayment policy influenced a large majority of hospital's changes in practice. The availability of nursing specialists for wound consult influenced hospitals internally. These factors are informative of the impact policy has on changes in hospital prioritization of adopting evidence-based practices for PU prevention.
近期数据显示,美国各医院的医院获得性压疮(PU)数量有所减少;这些变化可能与预防PU的循证实践实施成功率提高有关。本研究的目的是确定伤口护理护士对影响PU总体减少的主要因素的看法。
横断面描述性调查。
向98家大学卫生系统联盟(UHC)医院的伤口护理护士发放调查问卷。UHC由美国各地120多家学术医疗中心及附属机构组成。本次调查所征集的回复代表了一系列地理分布广泛的医院,床位从不到200张至超过1000张不等。
调查问卷采用了一个框架,包含7个内部和5个外部影响因素,用于实施预防PU的循证实践。所询问的内部影响因素包括护士专家的可获得性、护士高离职率、高PU发生率以及预防活动。外部影响因素包括数据共享、医疗保险拒付政策以及磁体认证申请。
通过伤口造口及失禁护理护士协会会员名录联系UHC医院的医院获得性PU预防专家,以完成调查问卷。同意参与的参与者通过电子邮件收到一份披露声明和在线调查问卷;还每月向他们发送提醒,直到他们回复调查或拒绝参与。
55名受访者(回复率59%)指出了几个影响循证实践的内部因素:医院预防活动;护理专家的可获得性;以及医院工作人员的预防知识水平。外部影响因素包括财务问题;磁体认证申请;同行机构间的数据共享;以及监管问题。
这些研究结果表明,医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心的拒付政策影响了大多数医院的实践变化。伤口咨询护理专家的可获得性在医院内部产生了影响。这些因素说明了政策对医院在采用预防PU循证实践方面优先事项变化的影响。