Wound care in five English NHS Trusts: Results of a survey

This survey aimed to identify and quantify the demographic characteristics, treatment objectives, and wound characteristics of patients from five English NHS Trusts receiving wound treatment. Data from 4772 patients (59.8% female; 79.7% aged >65 years) were received. Approximately half were leg w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Wounds UK 2013-11, Vol.9 (4), p.20-28
Hauptverfasser: Ousey, Karen, Stephenson, John, Barrett, Simon, King, Brenda, Morton, Nicky, Fenwick, Kim, Carr, Caryn
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container_end_page 28
container_issue 4
container_start_page 20
container_title Wounds UK
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creator Ousey, Karen
Stephenson, John
Barrett, Simon
King, Brenda
Morton, Nicky
Fenwick, Kim
Carr, Caryn
description This survey aimed to identify and quantify the demographic characteristics, treatment objectives, and wound characteristics of patients from five English NHS Trusts receiving wound treatment. Data from 4772 patients (59.8% female; 79.7% aged >65 years) were received. Approximately half were leg wounds. Most patients had one or more comorbidity, most commonly vascular and cardiovascular. The majority of wounds were
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Data from 4772 patients (59.8% female; 79.7% aged &gt;65 years) were received. Approximately half were leg wounds. Most patients had one or more comorbidity, most commonly vascular and cardiovascular. The majority of wounds were &lt;3 months' duration and had no associated infection indicators (a small minority had &gt;=3 infection indicators). Swabbing was considerably more common in wounds showing no primary infection indicators than in infected wounds. Nurses were most commonly involved with dressing changes. Protecting granulation was the most common treatment objective and dressings were changed most commonly twice-weekly as a scheduled care change. 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title Wound care in five English NHS Trusts: Results of a survey
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