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Learning During Crisis: The Impact of COVID-19 on Hospital-Acquired Pressure Injury Incidence

Shea Polancich, Allyson G. Hall, Rebecca S. Miltner, Terri Poe, Ene M. Enogela, Aoyjai P. Montgomery, Patricia A. Patrician

2021Journal for Healthcare Quality31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT: The impact of COVID-19, on the health and safety of patients, staff, and healthcare organizations, has yet to be fully uncovered. Patient adverse events, such as hospital-acquired pressure injuries (HAPIs), have been problematic for decades. The introduction of a pandemic to an environment that is potentially at-risk for adverse events may result in unintended patient safety and quality concerns. We use the learning health system framework to motivate our understanding of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the incidence of HAPIs within our health system. Using a retrospective, observational design, we used descriptive statistics to evaluate trends in HAPI from March to July 2020. Hospital-acquired pressure injury numbers have fluctuated from a steady increase from March-May 2020, hitting a peak high of 90 cases in the month of May. However, the trend in the total all stage HAPIs began to decline in June 2020, with a low of 51 in July, the lowest number since March 2020. Patients evaluated in this study did not have a longitudinal increase in HAPIs from March-July 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, despite similarities in illness severity between the two time points. Our experience has demonstrated the ability of our organizational leaders to learn quickly during crisis.

Topics & Concepts

PandemicObservational studyIncidence (geometry)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)MedicineHealth carePatient safetyAdverse effectEmergency medicineRetrospective cohort studyMedical emergencyDiseaseInternal medicinePolitical scienceInfectious disease (medical specialty)OpticsLawPhysicsPressure Ulcer Prevention and ManagementInfection Control and VentilationRespiratory Support and Mechanisms