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Today’s article is about, “Quick Tip for Families in Intensive Care: Does Lack of Turning & Wound Care for an ICU Patient Contribute to Worsening of Stage 4 Bedsores & Decline?”
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also watch the video here on our website https://intensivecarehotline.com/ventilation/quick-tip-for-families-in-intensive-care-does-lack-of-turning-wound-care-for-an-icu-patient-contribute-to-worsening-of-stage-4-bedsores-decline/ or you can continue reading the article below.
Quick Tip for Families in Intensive Care: Does Lack of Turning & Wound Care for an ICU Patient Contribute to Worsening of Stage 4 Bedsores & Decline?
A lack of turning and wound care for a critically ill patient in intensive care contribute significantly to the worsening of level 4 bed sores and overall decline? That’s a question that we have from one of our clients.
Hi, my name is Patrik Hutzel from intensivecarehotline.com and this is another quick tip for
families in intensive care.
Today, I have a question from one of our clients as part of a medical record
review we’ve done for them, and I’m going to answer that question today.
Does lack of turning and wound care for a critically ill patient in intensive care contribute significantly to the worsening of level 4 bed sores and overall decline? In short, yes, a lack of turning and proper wound care in an ICU setting absolutely contributes
significantly to the worsening of level 4 bed sores and overall patient decline, and it’s considered a serious lapse in standard critical care, and here is why.
Level 4 bed sores are really medical emergencies. Those involve full thickness tissue loss with exposure of muscle, bone, or tendons. In an ICU where patients are often immobile and critically ill, turning every 2 hours is absolutely
essential to prevent and manage pressure injuries. Immobile ICU patients are at extreme risk for pressure ulcers. Not turning them allows constant pressure over bony areas, impairing blood flow and causing rapid tissue death, especially in those with poor nutrition or perfusion. A lot of patients in ICU have poor perfusion because they’re often on high doses of inotropes or vasopressors constricting perfusion.
Next, of course, infection risk. Level 4 ulcers can easily become infected leading to sepsis, a life-threatening systemic infection, osteomyelitis, a bone infection, fistulas, or tunneling wounds. Without routine wound cleaning, dressing changes, and infection control, the wound deteriorates fast, and the patient deteriorates fast. Prevention is better than cure, preventing pressure sources is really what’s important because wound care is a
core ICU standard.
ICU protocols demand rigorous skin assessments, turning schedules, and wound management. Neglecting these can accelerate decline through infection, pain, and stress responses, fluid electrolyte imbalances, increased metabolic demands in a fragile patient, and of course, overall decline.
Patients in ICU are so fragile and vulnerable. They don’t need pressure sores to contribute to their already difficult clinical situation. Because these wounds drain energy, nutrients, and immune capacity from the body, combined with other ICU complications like ventilator use or infections, inotropes, vasopressors, often dialysis. Untreated bed sores can be a major factor in multi-system decline and death.
Obviously, this is very serious, and you need to raise this with, the ICU team. You need to raise it with hospital executive, patient advocates like you have done with us here at intensivecarehotline.com. But
you cannot let things like that slide, it’s too serious, and that’s why I’m saying you need help from Day 1 when you have a loved one critically ill in intensive care.
In our specific client question, the patient was consistently immobile throughout the ICU stay and the Braden Score was consistently documented as 8, categorizing the patient at very high risk for skin breakdown. During the stay of
the patient in ICU, the wounds failed to show signs of healing with notations describing bone exposure, no granulation tissue, continuous drainage, and deterioration rather than improvement.
In high risk patients, the standard of care requires not only turning to be ordered too hourly. But that it be performed, tracked and evaluated for effectiveness, i.e., check the skin. The absence of routine and
traceable implementation of these interventions suggests a breakdown in both preventive and responsive wound care.
Standard orders for repositioning every 2 hours and the use of low air loss alternating pressure mattress were present. There were documentation verifying that these reposition protocols were executed in our client’s case. However, the presence of worsening wounds, despite
preventative orders, raises concerns about whether repositioning and pressure offloading were actually performed as frequently or effectively as recorded.
There were no significant wound healing interventions beyond basic dressing changes, i.e. optimum goals are documented. There’s no evidence of advanced wound therapy such as negative pressure wound therapy, surgical debridement, or hyperbaric oxygen therapy being employed or pursued.
Clinical notes also describe
continued severe malnutrition and hypoalbuminemia. Albuminemia, which means a low albumin, both of which impair wound healing and heighten the importance of pressure relief strategies. The patient’s overall decline, including persistent infection, nutritional failure, and multi-system deterioration correlates temporarily with the failure of wound healing.
Failure to implement adequate repositioning
and escalating wound care strategies in a patient with stage 4 ulcers and systemic decline meets the threshold for contributory harm particularly when there is no evidence of wound improvement and no documented reassessment of current care effectiveness.
Combination of immobility, sepsis risk, low albumin, and lack of effective turning creates a high risk profile in the environment that requires
more aggressive multidisciplinary intervention. Like I said in my one of my last videos, the pressure I saw is a never event, lack of potential and effective turning, incomplete wound management and failure to escalate care contributed significantly to the worsening of the patient’s pressure injuries and likely accelerated the clinical decline.
I hope that answers your question.
Now, I have worked in critical care nursing for 25 years in three different countries where I worked as a nurse manager for over 5 years. I have been consulting and advocating for families in intensive care all over the world since 2013 here at intensivecarehotline.com. I can very confidently say that we have saved many lives for our clients with our consulting and advocacy. You can verify that on our testimonial section at intensivecarehotline.com.
You can click on the testimonial link, or you can go to our intensivecarehotline.com podcast where we have done client interviews, detailing and verifying everything that I’m saying here. You can go to intensivecarehotline.com and you can click on our podcast link to watch the interviews there.
Because our advice is absolutely life changing, and I mean that in every positive sense. It’s absolutely life changing because we have saved so many lives for
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That’s why I do one on one consulting and advocacy over the phone, Zoom, Skype, WhatsApp. Whichever medium works best for you. And I talk to you and your families directly. I handled you through this once in a lifetime situation that you simply can’t
afford to get wrong. I also talk to doctors and nurses directly or the case managers, whoever you want me to talk to, and I ask all the questions that you haven’t even considered asking but must be asked when you have a loved one critically ill in intensive care. You will see the dynamics shift very quickly once you know what questions to ask, once you have someone talk to the doctors and nurses directly who understand intensive care inside out just as they do.
I also represent you in family meetings with intensive care teams.
We also do medical record reviews in real time so that you can
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Thank you so much for watching.
This is Patrik Hutzel from intensivecarehotline.com and I will talk to you in a few days.
Take care for now.