Tele–Intensive Care Unit Collaboration to Decrease Pressure Injuries: A Quality Improvement Project

  • Jennifer Licare
  • , Kelly Small
  • , Jason White
  • , Christopher Palmer
  • , Cassandra Arroyo
  • , Gretchen Lucas
  • , Rebecca Rojek
  • , Beth Taylor
  • , Lisa Wright
  • , Marilyn Schallom

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background Critically ill patients may have pressure injuries upon admission, increasing the need for nursing care and resources. Local Problem An increase in pressure injuries during the COVID-19 pandemic required implementation of 2-nurse skin assessments for pressure injury identification and prevention. Methods A quality improvement initiative incorporating tele–intensive care unit (tele-ICU) nurses and wound, ostomy, and continence nurses using camera technology in collaboration with bedside intensive care unit nurses was conducted in 3 intensive care units within a multi-institutional health care system from 2021 through 2023. Sites included an academic medical center and 2 community hospitals. The team implemented the following bundle: (1) tele-ICU nurses provided second skin assessments, (2) tele-ICU and bedside intensive care unit nurses reviewed pressure injury prevention measures on admission, and (3) tele-ICU nurses documented pressure injuries. Customized daily dashboards and automated reporting were implemented. Crude data descriptive analysis and segmented regression analysis were used. Results For 4723 admissions, 2-nurse skin assessment compliance increased from 46.9% during the 9-month preimplementation period to 80.8% during the 18-month postimplementation period, showing that compliance increased by 72.3%. Overall, 1153 pressure injuries were identified on intensive care unit admission or transfer, a mean of 20.6 per month before implementation and 64.1 per month after imple-mentation. In the segmented regression analysis, the number of pressure injuries identified as present on admission significantly increased after implementation (P = .02). Conclusion Integrating tele-ICU nurses, bedside intensive care unit nurses, and wound, ostomy, and continence nurses with camera technology increased compliance with 2-nurse assessments, leading to identification of present-on-admission pressure injuries, prompt treatment, and preventive interventions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)50-59
Number of pages10
JournalCritical Care Nurse
Volume45
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1 2025

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