Validity and reliability of the Waterlow scale for assessing pressure injury risk in critical adult patients: A multi‐centre cohort study

Author:

Han Lin12ORCID,Guo Jiali1,Zhang Hongyan2,Lv Lin34,Dong Jianhui1,Zhang Tong1,Yan Fanghong1,Ma Yuxia14

Affiliation:

1. Evidence‐Based Nursing Center, School of Nursing Lanzhou University Lanzhou City China

2. Department of Nursing Gansu Provincial Hospital Lanzhou City China

3. Wound and Ostomy Care Center Gansu Provincial Hospital Lanzhou City China

4. The First Clinical Medical College Lanzhou University Lanzhou City China

Abstract

AbstractAimTo evaluate the predictive validity and reliability of the Waterlow scale in critically adult hospitalised patients.DesignA multi‐centre cohort study.MethodsThis study was conducted in 72 intensive care units (ICUs) in 38 tertiary hospitals in Gansu Province, China. All adults admitted to the ICU for greater than or equal to 24 h without pressure injury (PI) on admission were screened by the Waterlow scale on admission, during ICU stay and ICU discharge from April 2021 to February 2023. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were used to determine a potential cut‐off value for critical adult hospitalised patients. Cut‐off values were then determined using Youden's index, and sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and accuracy were calculated based on these cut‐off values. Test–retest reliability was used to evaluate inter‐rater reliability.ResultsA total of 5874 critical patients on admission were included, and 5125 of them were assessed regularly. The area under curve (AUC) was 0.623 (95% CI, 0.574–0.690), with a cut‐off score of 19 showing the best balance among sensitivity of 62.7%, specificity of 57.4%, positive predictive value of 2.07% and negative predictive value of 99.08%. The test–retest reliability between the first assessment and the regular assessment was 0.447.ConclusionsThe Waterlow scale shows insufficient predictive validity and reliability in discriminating critical adults at risk of PI development. To further modify the items of the Waterlow scale, exploring specific risk factors for PI in the ICU and clarifying their impact degree was necessary. Risk predictive models or better tools are inevitable in the future.Patient or Public ContributionPatients or family members supported nurses with PI risk assessment, skin examination and other activities during the inquiry.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,General Nursing

Reference36 articles.

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