Hospital-Acquired Pressure Injuries
Cross-source consensus on Hospital-Acquired Pressure Injuries from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
How it works
Benefits
Risks & contraindications
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- Hospital-acquired pressure injuries are a major preventable hospital safety problem. — Development and validation of the Pressure Injury after Hospital Admission (PIAHA) screening tool for early assessment of hospital-acquired pressure injuries: a multiphase multicentre study protocol in acute care settings
- Pressure injuries can develop within 1 to 6 hours after exposure to risk conditions. — Development and validation of the Pressure Injury after Hospital Admission (PIAHA) screening tool for early assessment of hospital-acquired pressure injuries: a multiphase multicentre study protocol in acute care settings
- Hospital-acquired pressure injuries cause clinical harms including pain, infection, prolonged recovery, morbidity, mortality, and longer hospital stays. — Development and validation of the Pressure Injury after Hospital Admission (PIAHA) screening tool for early assessment of hospital-acquired pressure injuries: a multiphase multicentre study protocol in acute care settings
- Hospital-acquired pressure injuries are regarded as largely preventable, with up to 95% considered preventable. — Development and validation of the Pressure Injury after Hospital Admission (PIAHA) screening tool for early assessment of hospital-acquired pressure injuries: a multiphase multicentre study protocol in acute care settings
- Global data estimate hospital-acquired pressure injuries at about 5.4 per 10,000 hospitalized patients daily. — Development and validation of the Pressure Injury after Hospital Admission (PIAHA) screening tool for early assessment of hospital-acquired pressure injuries: a multiphase multicentre study protocol in acute care settings