TPCU Patients
Skin Sleuths
Device Dangers
Documentation Detectives
HAPI Hot Seat
100

This patient population frequently experiences decreased mobility and sensation, placing them at an increased risk for pressure injury development.

SCI patients

100

What is the earliest visible sign of a stage 1 pressure injury?

Non-blanchable redness 

100

This trauma device is responsible for many hospital-acquired device-related pressure injuries.

Cervical collar

100

What is the risk assessment tool that should be completed on admission and reassessed throughout hospitalization

Braden Scale

100

What does HAPI stand for?

Hospital Acquired Pressure Injury

200

A patient with multiple rib fractures is avoiding movement because of pain. What pressure injury risk factor does this create, even if the patient is physically able to reposition themselves? 

Immobility (or decreased mobility)

200

A patient has darkly pigmented skin. This pressure injury assessment finding may be more difficult to identify.

Erythema (Redness)

200

Name 3 areas that should be assessed when caring for a patient with a cervical collar

Chin, occiput (back of the head/skull), shoulders/clavicle area
200

A patient scores a 12 on the Braden Scale. What category of risk does this represent?

High Risk

200
A patient develops redness beneath a cervical collar. What is the priority action?

Offload pressure and assess skin. Provide hygiene, change out pads

300

A patient with bilateral lower extremity fractures is on strict bedrest. What two body areas should receive special attention during skin assessments?

Sacrum and heels
300
True or False: Warmth, firmness, and pain may indicate pressure injury. 

True

300

A patient has oxygen tubing in place continuously. Name 2 commonly overlooked pressure points.

Ears and cheeks 

300

A patient has blanchable redness to the coccyx. Why is documentation important even though it is not yet a pressure injury?

To establish a baseline and monitor for progression

300

A patient experiences frequent diarrhea during their shift. Which pressure injury risk factor is increased because of this?

Moisture (or moisture exposure)

400

This common trauma diagnosis may cause cognitive deficits that limit a patient's ability to recognize discomfort and request repositioning.

Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
400

This tissue is often damaged before visible skin changes appear.

Muscle tissue

400

A patient returns from surgery with a bulky splint. What should the nurse assess beneath or around the device?

Skin integrity and pressure areas

400

What score, if documented 3 consecutive shifts prompts a wound care consult?

15 or below

400

Name four common contributing factors identified during HAPI reviews

Missed assessments, inadequate repositioning, moisture exposure, device related pressure, poor nutrition, delayed recognition

500

A patient with a pelvic fracture has been in bed for four days and refuses turns due to pain. Name four interventions that could help reduce pressure injury risk.

Pain management before repositioning

heel offloading

foam dressing

PT/OT involvement 

Continued patient education

500

A patient has intact purple discoloration over the coccyx after prolonged immobility. What type of pressure injury is suspected?

Deep tissue injury

500

Name 5 medical devices commonly found on TPCU patients that can contribute to pressure injuries.

NG tubes, peg tubes, foley tubing, BiPAP/CPAP, C-collar

500

Name 3 documentation findings that would support pressure injury prevention efforts during a chart review.

Skin care plan, repositioning, Braden assessment, mobility documentation, hygiene, offloading interventions, moisture managment

500

A TPCU patient has a cervical collar, multiple fractures, bedrest orders, Braden score of 11, is incontinent, and has a poor appetite. 

What interventions should be considered to prevent pressure injury?

Q2 turning, heel offloading, Qshift skin assessments, Skin care plan, hygiene, c-collar care, moisture management, protein supplementation/dietician consult, specialty mattress, foam dressings, Mobility progression, PT/OT, education, accurate documentation
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