Risk Factors
Documentation
What's my Stage
Prevention
Prevention 2
100

Name three risk factors for developing pressure injuries.

What is obesity, poor nutrition, prior skin ulcers, dehydration, sensory impairment, smoking, immobility

100

This is how often the Braden Scale should be documented on the nursing flow sheet.

What is once a shift

100
Purple or maroon localized area of discolored intact skin or blood filled blister due to damage of underlying soft tissue from pressure and/or shear.
What is suspected Deep Tissue Injury
100

Used on patients with at risk/pressure areas on coccyx when patient in chair

What is air cushion or waffle

100

Use of this with a sacral foam border dressing (mepilex) is contraindicated

What is calmoseptine or zinc

200

The greatest risk factor for the pressure injury development.

What is Immobility

200

This type of check & documentation is done on admission and transfer

What is the two-person skin check

200

Partial thickness loss of skin with exposed dermis. The wound bed is viable, pink or red, moist, and may also be present as an intact or ruptured serum-filled blister.

What is Stage 2

200

When patients are incontinent of stool this is used as a skin protective barrier

What is calmoseptine or zinc

200

Patients at nutritional risk should be offered this.

What is high protein or nutritional supplements

300

Immobility for what time frame can cause tissue ischemia?

What is 20 minutes

300

Where pressure injury resources are found online at CMH

What is the CMH Portal, under clinical resources and SWAT Team (Skin Wound Assessment Team)

300

Full thickness skin & tissue loss with exposed or directly palpable fascia, muscle, tendon, ligament, cartilage, or bone in the ulcer

What is Stage 4

300

Isoflex, Isolibrium, and Air Mattress

What are pressure relieving/reducing surfaces

300

Frequent repositioning can prevent injury on which three high risk pressure points? (more than 3 possible)

What is heel, sacrum/coccyx, hips, knee, occipital, buttocks

400

Parallel frictional force that occurs as patients are dragged during repositioning as opposed to being lifted and moved.

What is shearing

400

These are the people the nurse notifies/consults when a patient has a pressure injury. 

Patient, Family, Provider, Charge Nurse, Dietary, and Wound Nurse

400

Full thickness skin loss, in which adipose (fat) is visible in the ulcer & granulation tissue & epibole (rolled wound edge) are often present. Slough &/or eschar may be visible.

What is Stage 3

400

What blood work might be assessed to determine nutritional status?

What is pre albumin or albumin level

400

Water filled gloves, sheep skin, and donut rings

What worsens ischemia if used and routine use should be avoided (may be used in procedural situation)

500

This scale is utilized to assess patient's risk factor for pressure injury by assessing patient's: sensory perception, moisture, activity, mobility, nutrition, friction, and shear

What is the Braden Scale

500

This replaces our nursing pressure ulcer order set

What is a Pressure Injury Power Plan

500

Full thickness skin & tissue loss in which the extent of tissue damage within the ulcer cannot be confirmed because it is obscured by slough or eschar.

What is Unstageable

500

Pressure injury from oxygen sat probes, NG tubes, braces, drains, catheters, Bipap/CPAP, face masks, IV tubing, compression sleeves or stockings, endotracheal tubes 

What is an MDRI: Medical Device Related Injury

500

What device should be used on patients with 2 or more of these criteria: Braden<14, BMI>35, current sacral press. inj, high risk pt (vent, pressors, Hx PI, 3rd spacing)

What is Turn & Position System or Tortoise

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