Wound Practice & Research: Journal of the Australian Wound Management Association | 2019

A cluster-controlled clinical trial of two prophylactic silicone sacral dressings to prevent sacral pressure injuries in critically ill patients

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Objective Patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) have increased risk of pressure injury (PI) development due to critical illness. This study compared two silicone dressings used in the Australian ICU setting for sacral PI prevention.Design A cluster-controlled clinical trial of two sacral dressings with four alternating periods of three months duration.Setting A 10-bed general adult ICU in outer-metropolitan Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.Participants Adult participants who did not have a sacral PI present on ICU admission and were able to have a dressing applied for more than 24 hours without repeated dislodgement or soiling in a 24-hour period (>3 times).Interventions Dressing 1 (Allevyn Life Sacrum (TM), Smith & Nephew) and Dressing 2 (Mepilex Border Sacrum (TM), Molnlycke).Main outcomes measures The primary outcome was the incidence of a new sacral PI (stage 1 or greater) per 100 dressing days in the ICU. Secondary outcomes were the mean number of dressings per patient, the cost difference of dressings to prevent a sacral PI and product integrity.Results There was no difference in the incidence of a new sacral PI (0.44 per 100 dressing days for both products, p = 1.00), the mean number of dressings per patient per day (0.50 for both products, p = 0.51) and product integrity (85% for Dressing 1 and 84% for Dressing 2, p = 0.69). There was a dressing cost difference per patient (A$10.29 for Dressing 1 and A$28.84 for Dressing 2, p < 0.001).Conclusions Similar efficacy, product use and product integrity, but differential cost, were observed for two prophylactic silicone dressings in the prevention of PIs in the intensive care patient. We recommend the use of sacral prophylactic dressings for at-risk patients, with the choice of product based on ease of application, clinician preference and overall cost-effectiveness of the dressing.

Volume 27
Pages 21-26
DOI 10.33235/WPR.27.1.21-26
Language English
Journal Wound Practice & Research: Journal of the Australian Wound Management Association

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