Association between skin injuries and the importance atributed to prevention by health professionals during the pandemic

Author:

Brandão Euzeli da Silva1ORCID,Lanzillotti Regina Serrão2ORCID,Granja Paula Dadalti1ORCID,Silva Liliane Faria1ORCID,Mandelbaum Maria Helena Sant’Ana3ORCID,Tonole Renato4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brasil

2. Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil

3. Universidade do Vale do Paraíba, Brasil

4. Instituto Nacional de Câncer, Brasil

Abstract

ABSTRACT Objective: To verify the association between the occurrence of skin lesions due to the use of products and/or personal protective equipment and the importance attributed to preventive care among health professionals working on the front lines of the struggle against the COVID-19 pandemic. Method: Cross-sectional, analytical study, carried out between May and June 2020, with a convenience sample (n=398) of health workers from 10 professional categories. To verify the existence of an association between the occurrence of skin lesions and exposure variables, a Contingency Table was used to obtain the Prevalence Ratio and respective Confidence Intervals. Results: 260 (65.3%) participants self-declared the development of skin lesions, predominantly nurses (53.8%), women (54.0%), from public institutions (52.8%), characterized by pressure injuries (37.3%), contact/allergic dermatitis (25.8%), or both lesions simultaneously (16.5%). More than half of professionals (53.5%) used preventive products, mainly moisturizers (51.0%). Conclusion: There was probability of an association between professionals who attributed less importance to the predictor “Protocol for proper product PPE and products” and the risk of skin injuries.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

General Nursing

Reference20 articles.

1. The adverse skin reactions of health care workers using personal protective equipment for COVID-19;Hu K;Medicine,2020

2. Prevención de lesiones cutáneas causadas por productos y equipos de protección personal durante COVID-19: revisión de alcance;Brandão ES;J Wound Care,2020

3. Skin damage and the risk of infection among healthcare workers managing coronavirus disease-2019;Lan J;J Am Acad Dermatol,2020

4. Pressure injuries due to personal protective equipment in Covid-19 critical care units;Bambi S;Am J Crit Care,2021

5. Pressure injury related to the use of personal protective equipment in COVID-19 pandemic;Coelho MMF;Rev Bras Enferm,2020

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