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Preventing Pressure Ulcers—Respiratory Team Preserves Patient Safety

  • Researching and trying different breathing equipment
  • Improving communication among team members and other health care workers, such as wound nurses
  • Focusing on fixing problems, not blaming each other

What can your team do to increase awareness of how equipment can impact patient care? 

This respiratory therapy team knew it was using breathing aids on patients longer term than it used to in the past. What care givers didn’t realize was that this was causing more pressure ulcers. So when they saw the data, they sprung into action. As one therapist put it, “We’re here to do something good and something positive,” not to cause harm. Using the structure of its unit-based team and partnership principles, the team came together to reduce the number of pressure ulcers.                                                                                                                 

Preventing Pressure Ulcers
Archived content
Live, non-archived content
TTP Blurb
The team went two years without a single instance of a serious pressure ulcer resulting from a respiratory aid.
Why This Matters
We are committed to keeping patients free from hospital-acquired ulcers
Test of Change
Testing and evaluating new, better supplies and equipment
Short Teaser

Ideas and tips your team can use.

Medium Teaser

How respiratory therapists used data, the structure of its unit-based team and partnership principles to reduce the number of pressure ulcers and protect patient safety.

Long Teaser

How respiratory therapists used data, the structure of its unit-based team and partnership principles to reduce the number of pressure ulcers and protect patient safety.

Nav Section
Preview Image
Health care worker standing next to a patient in a hospital bed wearing a breathing mask
Landing Page Title
Preventing Pressure Ulcers
Topics
Patient Safety
Region
Northern California
Communicator
Non-LMP
Editor (if known)
Tyra Ferlatte
Keywords
respiratory care
communication
Date of publication
This has been edited
0
Department
Inpatient
Content Type
Team-Tested Practice
Content Goal
Inform
Big Number
0
Explanation

serious pressure ulcers resulting from a respiratory aid for two years