Abstract
Background: Health care within the home setting is a vital and growing component of pressure injury (PI) prevention and management. Objectives: To describe the use of health services and pressure-redistributing devices in community dwelling patients with PI’s. Design: Mixed-methods collective case study of a defined, diverse geographic postcode area in the United Kingdom. Methods: Quantitative retrospective analysis of electronic and paper medical records of adult PI patients from 2015 district nursing reports. Qualitative semi-structured interviews of community dwelling adult patients receiving, or received, treatment for PI in 2016. Results: Mandatory reports (n = 103) revealed that 90 patients were supplied with a variety of pressure-redistributing devices but only one-third of patients used the equipment as recommended. Qualitative interviews (n = 12), reported to COREQ guidelines, revealed that patients felt reliant on community health services, and were concerned about the consistency of their care. Conclusions: Authentic patient involvement is required to provide care and interventions that are acceptable to PI patients and can be incorporated into self-care strategies and effectively monitored.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Jackson, D., Durrant, L., Bishop, E., Walthall, H., Betteridge, R., Gardner, S., … Usher, K. (2017). Health service provision and the use of pressure-redistributing devices: mixed methods study of community dwelling individuals with pressure injuries. Contemporary Nurse, 53(3), 378–389. https://doi.org/10.1080/10376178.2017.1364973
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.