1. Skin integrity preservation using a nurse-constructed silicone adhesive Foley catheter.
- Author
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Van Houten CT, Mann CL, Misiti N, and Qualls BW
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Prospective Studies, Pilot Projects, Young Adult, Silicones, Urinary Catheterization nursing, Urinary Catheterization instrumentation, Urinary Catheterization adverse effects, Adhesives adverse effects, Urinary Catheters adverse effects
- Abstract
Aims: Skin breakdown is common in the intensive care unit (ICU). This pilot evaluation aimed to determine whether a nurse-constructed urinary catheter securement device using a silicone adhesive could reduce the complications of blistering and other skin breakdowns in a high-risk ICU population with Foley catheters., Design: A prospective, non-randomised performance improvement study using a convenience sample was carried out., Subjects and Setting: The study sample consisted of 29 patients with urethral Foley catheters and any degree of thigh oedema in a surgical ICU at an academic quarternary medical center., Methods: Patients were fitted with a standard acrylic-adhesive catheter securement device on one thigh and a nurse-constructed device on the contralateral thigh. At the beginning of each 12-hour shift, the nurse moved the Foley catheter from one securement device to the other; the nurse recorded the assessment findings at the end of the shift., Results: The average age of the 29 patients was 61±16 (range 20-87) years. Visible skin compromise occurred in 21% of the time with the standard acrylic securement device; an equal percentage of men and women developed skin breakdown. Oedema status was a significant factor related to skin breakdown. There was no visible damage to the skin associated with the nurse-constructed silicone-adhesive device., Conclusions: A silicone adhesive urinary catheter securement device causes less skin damage than one with acrylic adhesive. One-step application, pain-free and atraumatic removal, and reliable securement are essential considerations in product development.
- Published
- 2024
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