The clinical effectiveness of an integrated multidisciplinary evidence‐based program to prevent intraoperative pressure injuries in high‐risk children undergoing long‐duration surgical procedures: A quality improvement study

Guido Ciprandi(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Serena Crucianelli(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Mario Zama(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Giancarlo Antonielli(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Riccarda Armani(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Stefano Aureli(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Gianmarco Barra(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Charlie Joseph Charles Beetham(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Giulio Bernardini(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Federica Cancani(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Andrea Carai(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Marta Cajozzo(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Laura Carlesi(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Alessandra Cialdella(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Italo Ciaralli(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Gaetano Ciliento(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Tiziana Corsetti(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Benedetta De Chirico(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Paolo Di Corato(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Andrea Dotta(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Sergio Filippelli(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Marina Franci(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Jacopo Maria Frattaroli(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Francesca Grussu(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Silvia Lico(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Patrizia Losani(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Marjola Giergji(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Simonetta Magli(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Simone Faustino Marino(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Antonella Mongelli(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Martina Nazzarri(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), M Pace(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), G. Palmieri(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Ilaria Pannacci(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Franca Paparozzi(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Manuel Pomponi(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Anna Portanova(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Alessandra Preziosi(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Angela Ragni(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Massimiliano Raponi(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Tommaso Renzetti(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Mirialda Rizzo(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Marco Roberti(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Eleonora Sasso(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Immacolata Savarese(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Simone Secci(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Daniele Selvaggio(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Laura Serafini(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Giorgio Spuntarelli(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Urbano Urbani(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Valentina Vanzi(Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital), Roshani Permatunga(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Nick Santamaria(The Royal Melbourne Hospital)
International Wound Journal
October 17, 2022
Cited by 11Open Access
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Abstract

The prevention of hospital-acquired pressure injuries (HAPIs) in children undergoing long-duration surgical procedures is of critical importance due to the potential for catastrophic sequelae of these generally preventable injuries for the child and their family. Long-duration surgical procedures in children have the potential to result in high rates of HAPI due to physiological factors and the difficulty or impossibility of repositioning these patients intraoperatively. We developed and implemented a multi-modal, multi-disciplinary translational HAPI prevention quality improvement program at a large European Paediatric University Teaching Hospital. The intervention comprised the establishment of wound prevention teams, modified HAPI risk assessment tools, specific education, and the use of prophylactic dressings and fluidized positioners during long-duration surgical procedures. As part of the evaluation of the effectiveness of the program in reducing intraoperative HAPI, we conducted a prospective cohort study of 200 children undergoing long-duration surgical procedures and compared their outcomes with a matched historical cohort of 200 children who had undergone similar surgery the previous year. The findings demonstrated a reduction in HAPI in the intervention cohort of 80% (p < 0.01) compared to the comparator group when controlling for age, pathology, comorbidity, and surgical duration. We believe that the findings demonstrate that it is possible to significantly decrease HAPI incidence in these highly vulnerable children by using an evidence-based, multi-modal, multidisciplinary HAPI prevention strategy.


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