Background: Seventeen hospitals and the Peer Review Organization of Connecticut (Qualidigm) attempted to increase early identification of high-risk patients and utilization of pressure ulcer preventive measures.
Methods: A multihospital retrospective cohort study with medical record abstraction was used to obtain a total of 1,955 (baseline) and 891 (follow-up) patients aged 65 years and older discharged after treatment for pneumonia, cerebrovascular disease, or congestive heart failure with a length of stay > or = five days. During a nine-month period, the hospitals conducted four plan-do-study-act improvement cycles and shared their results in conference calls and group meetings.
Results: Statistically significant increases were noted from baseline (1/1/96-12/31/96) to follow-up (10/1/97-3/31/98) in identification of high-risk patients, repositioning of bed-bound or chair-bound patients, nutritional consults in malnourished patients, and staging of acquired Stage II pressure ulcers. Daily skin assessments occurred at a high rate in both periods. There were no statistically significant changes in other processes of care, pressure ulcer incidence, or mortality.
Discussion: Performance of four pressure ulcer prevention processes of care increased concurrently with a multifaceted improvement intervention.