2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2017.12.012
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Effect of a wearable patient sensor on care delivery for preventing pressure injuries in acutely ill adults: A pragmatic randomized clinical trial (LS-HAPI study)

Abstract: Among acutely ill adult patients requiring Intensive Care Unit admission, the provision of optimal turning was greater with a wearable patient sensor, increasing the total time with turning compliance and demonstrated a statistically significant protective effect against the development of hospital acquired pressure injuries. These are the first quantitative data on turn quality in the Intensive Care Unit and highlight the need to reinforce optimal turning practices. Additional clinical trials leveraging techn… Show more

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Cited by 77 publications
(73 citation statements)
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“…Within the robotics category, two thirds of the studies and all RCTs focus on the robotic seal Paro, so this is one of the few technologies that is quite extensively researched; nevertheless most of the studies are rather small. In the monitoring/sensors category there are only four RCTs, of which only two report positive results on pressure ulcer prevention [112] and behaviour analysis for care decision support respectively [120]. Still there are several quasi-experimental studies, most of which yield positive results, which may point to promising future research areas.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Within the robotics category, two thirds of the studies and all RCTs focus on the robotic seal Paro, so this is one of the few technologies that is quite extensively researched; nevertheless most of the studies are rather small. In the monitoring/sensors category there are only four RCTs, of which only two report positive results on pressure ulcer prevention [112] and behaviour analysis for care decision support respectively [120]. Still there are several quasi-experimental studies, most of which yield positive results, which may point to promising future research areas.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Inactive sensors did not provide feedback to the staff who relied on ‘usual’ care to determine when and how to reposition their patients. The research team3 decided, based on best available evidence, that turning should happen every 2 hours, the minimum turn angle should be 20° with at least 15 min of tissue depressurisation. The primary outcome was development of an HAPI.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies using different approaches have also been able to reduce HAPI incidence, for example, using turning teams, bedside consultations and rounding. Pickham et al 3 prefer their sensor method as they believe it has a greater chance of producing change in staff behaviour and is less resource intensive. The fact that the RCT was pragmatic means results are likely to be replicable in real life.…”
Section: Commentarymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Beberapa penelitian tentang Evidence-Based Practice(EBP) menunjukkan bahwa praktik berbasis bukti mampu meningkatkan kualitas pelayanan diberbagai tingkat layanan kesehatan yang ada.Reposisi pasien dengan risiko tekanan ulkus setiap tiga jam pada malam hari, menggunakan kemiringan 30°, mengurangi kejadian ulkus tekanan dibandingkan dengan perawatan biasa (Moore, Cowman, & Conroy, 2011). Penggunaan Sensor pasien pada perawatan pasien di unit perawatan intensif menunjukkan 1,6 % lebih efektif mencegah kejadian PI dibanding dengan pasien yang tidak menggunakan sensor pasien (Pickham et al, 2018). Penerapan pencegahan PI berbasis bukti mampu menurunkan kejadian dekubitus 12,5% -3,2% (Linda, 2011).…”
Section: Pendahuluanunclassified