Better pain management = fewer pressure ulcers: revising the pain-assessment protocol in this rehab unit lowered the number of facility-acquired pressure ulcers by 69%. (Feature Article).When the Delmarva Foundation for Medical Care, Maryland's Quality Improvement Organization (QIO QIO Quality Improvement Organization QIO Queued Input Output QIO Quality Improvement Opportunity QIO Quality Inspection Operations QIO Quality Inspection Office ) under the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), previously known as the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), is a federal agency within the United States Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) that administers the Medicare program and (CMS (1) See content management system and color management system. (2) (Conversational Monitor System) Software that provides interactive communications for IBM's VM operating system. ) nursing home quality initiative (NHQI NHQI Nursing Home Quality Initiative ),met with its select group of nursing homes in the pilot state to brainstorm, the director of nursing and administrative team from St. Mary's Nursing Center in Leonardtown, Maryland Leonardtown is the county seat of St. Mary's County, MarylandGR6. The population was 1,896 at the 2000 census. The College of Southern Maryland maintains a small day campus there; there is both a large public and a Catholic high school, and offices of , came up with a novel approach to pressure-ulcer prevention: pain management. A quality-assurance study at St. Mary's. which has 170 long-term care long-term care (LTC), n the provision of medical, social, and personal care services on a recurring or continuing basis to persons with chronic physical or mental disorders. beds and 42 rehab beds, had shown that one-third of all facility-acquired wounds were developing in the rehab unit. Therefore, the administrative team--consisting of Director of Nursing Monica Hayden, Assistant Director of Nursing Missey O'Brien, Quality Assurance Coordinator Debi Achtellik, and Administrator Donald Lewis--proposed that improved pain management in that unit might lead to a better pressure-ulcer report card, since people experiencing pain tend to be less mobile than those without pain or whose pain is controlled. They were correct. Beginning in July 2002, a revised protocol for pain management was instituted at the facility. Under the new protocol, pain was assessed upon admission and the third day after admission. If the follow-up assessment revealed the presence of daily pain, the attending physician was contacted to obtain a pain medication. Follow-up pain and skin assessments were to continue through four weeks postadmission, or until the pain was resolved. Before the initiation of the newprotocol, residents' pain was assessed only upon admission. The revised protocol was refined further once the program got under way, when it was determined that staff follow-through was still lacking after the second pain assessment. To correct this problem, the protocol was changed: It now includes pain assessments every three days until pain control is achieved, then weekly for four weeks, then monthly thereafter. The pain assessment form used at St. Mary's was also revised. The new form is designed to detect more than one source or type of pain, focusing on quality, rather than intensity, of pain. Hayden explains, "The main issue is how many sources of pain are there? Then we need to determine what its qualities are. Is it a burning pain? Is it pressure? Where is it?" The form asks whether the resident has pain now, has had pain in the last 7 days, and has pain in more than one location. Also included on the form are line drawings (body charts), on which residents (or their family members! friends/other representatives) can mark the location of each pain. Then residents are asked to "describe each pain in the resident's own words (i.e., burning, stinging, stabbing stab v. stabbed, stab·bing, stabs v.tr. 1. To pierce or wound with or as if with a pointed weapon. 2. To plunge (a pointed weapon or instrument) into something. 3. , deep ache, numbness numbness /numb·ness/ (num´nes) anesthesia (1). Numbness Loss of feeling or sensation. Mentioned in: Topical Anesthesia , cramp, tightening, worse on movement or breathing, etc.)," and to designate whether the pain is "constant" or "intermittent." Further questions are included regarding each pain marked on the body charts, to determine whether this pain occurs daily, at what time of day, and what makes it better or worse. "The answers to these questions give the physician a great deal of useful information to help him direct treatment," says Hayden. By the end of this program in September 2002, the incidence of facility acquired pressure ulcers Pressure ulcer Also known as a decubitus ulcer, pressure ulcers are open wounds that form whenever prolonged pressure is applied to skin covering bony outcrops of the body. Patients who are bedridden are at risk of developing pressure ulcers. in the rehab unit had dropped by 69%, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Hayden. She says, "Benefits we hadn't specifically anticipated included fewer complaints from residents, fewer dressing changes, and fewer nurse-call bells to answer. The residents are up and more mobile than before, and both staff and residents are happier. Our quality-assurance coordinator is tracking the outcomes data, but these improvements certainly attest To solemnly declare verbally or in writing that a particular document or testimony about an event is a true and accurate representation of the facts; to bear witness to. To formally certify by a signature that the signer has been present at the execution of a particular writing so as to the program's success. Hayden says the pressure-ulcer prevention program was successful, in large part, because of St. Mary's Nursing Center's supportive medical director, who even opted to attend the Delmarva meetings with her, and a proactive nurse practitioner nurse practitioner n. Abbr. NP A registered nurse with special training for providing primary health care, including many tasks customarily performed by a physician. , who helped a great deal with pain control. Hayden also emphasizes the benefits of being in an NHQI pilot state and working with a QIO: "Meeting with Delmarva gave us an outlet where we could brainstorm, and they've been very supportive. They wanted us to take one small measure of change and see its impact. Although this turned out to be a larger project than we had anticipated, it's been so successful." Now the task at hand is to expand the program. Hayden says that St. Mary's is now in the process of instituting the pain-management protocol throughout the facility, initiating it in one additional unit at a time. Monica Hayden, RN, CRRN CRRN Certified Rehabilitation Registered Nurse CRRN Caribbean Rice Research Network , is director of nursing at St. Mary's Nursing Center, Leonardtown, Maryland. For more information, e-mail monica.hayden@stmarysnursingcenter.com. For more information on the Delmarva Foundation for Medical Care, phone (410) 822-0697; fax (410) 822-7291; e-mail cweinmann@dfmc.org; or visit www.dfmc.org. To comment on this article, please send email to zinn0303@nursinghomesmagazine.com. |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion