Outcomes

National recognition

RML’s program for prevention and treatment of pressure ulcers has been recognized for clinical excellence by the National Association of Long-Term Hospitals (NALTH).

 

Incidence of Pressure Ulcers

A pressure ulcer is a localized injury to the skin and/or underlying tissue due to pressure over a bony prominence. Factors such as older age, poor circulation, lack of mobility, friction and malnutrition significantly contribute to the risk of developing pressure ulcers. The patients treated at RML Specialty Hospital are seriously ill, and are at very high risk for developing pressure ulcers while hospitalized. Many of our patients are admitted with pressure ulcers that occurred in their prior setting of care.

Pressure ulcers are painful, take a long time to heal, and cause other complications such as skin and bone infections. Our goal is to employ forefront strategies to help heal the pressure ulcers patients already have at the time of admission and prevent new ones from developing.

RML uses the Hill Rom Inpatient Pressure Ulcer Prevalence Survey, which is the nationally recognized benchmark for measuring the frequency of acute care hospital-acquired pressure ulcers. More than 700 facilities participate in creating this database, against which we can compare our rates. The definition is the percentage of inpatients present on the day of sampling who have hospital-acquired pressure ulcers,  excluding stage one (or minor ulcers). Lower rates reflect fewer ulcers.

As the chart below shows, RML’s rate of pressure ulcers for fiscal year 2012 was 0.8% or less than a third the nationally reported rates of 2.6% for acute-care hospitals, and 2.5% for LTCHs.

RML has been recognized with a clinical excellence award in pressure ulcer prevention from the National Association of Long Term Hospitals (NALTH).