Risk Factors for Pressure Ulcer Development
Classification of Pressure Injuries
Complications of Wound Healing
Factors influencing pressure injury formation and wound healing
The Nursing Process
100

When patients are unable to feel when a part of their body undergo increased, prolonged pressure or pain.

What is altered sensory perception?

100

Non-blanchable erythema of intact skin

What is stage 1?

100

Escaped blood loss from a blood vessel.

What is hemorrhage?

100

This lab level determines the best nutritional status of a patient.

What is pre-albumin?

100

Perform this when you initiate care and a minimal of once per shift.  It is the foundation for developing a care plan.

What is a skin assessment?

200

The force that occurs in the opposite direction from the intended movement.  It often occurs when the head of the bed of greater than 60 degrees.

What is shear?

200

Partial-thickness skin loss with exposed dermis

What is Stage 2?

200

Caused by microorganisms that invade tissue and prolongs the inflammatory phase that can lead to tissue destruction .

What is infection?

200

This determines of adequate amounts of oxygenated blood is circulating.

What is tissue perfusion?

200

This is revealed from the assessment clusters of data.

What is nursing diagnosis?

300

This happens when skin is dragged across bed linen aka sheet burn.

What is friction?

300

Full-thickness skin loss

What is Stage 3?

300

Partial or total separation of previously approximated wound edges of a surgical site.

What is dehiscence?

300

Adequate amounts of proteins, vitamins, and minerals.

What is nutrition?

300

This is developed to promote interventions.  Critical thinking ensures this integrates all you know about the patient and key elements.

What is plan of care?

400

The state of patients who are comatose, confused, or disoriented.

What is alteration in LOC?

400

Full-thickness skin and tissue loss

What is stage 4?

400

Protrusion of visceral organs through a surgical incision.

What is evisceration?

400

The physiological change that slows all phases of wound healing.

What is aging?

400

Prompt identification of patients at high risk for pressure injuries or for impaired wound healing requires timely and appropriate _______ and require a holistic approach that uses interprofessional expertise such as wound care specialists.

What are intervention/implementations?

500

Patients who are unable to independently change positions.

What is impaired mobility?

500

Obscured full-thickness skin and tissue loss.

What is unstageable?

500

Negative factors that slow the healing process.

What is diabetes?

What is smoking?

500

Factors such as body image changes, self-concept, and sexuality on wound healing.

What is psychosocial impact?

500

You ______ the effectiveness of nursing interventions for reducing and treating pressure injuries and other wounds by determining the patient's response to nursing therapies, determining outcomes, and ______ whether he or she achieved each goal

What is evaluate?