Affiliation:
1. Rehabilitationf or Independence, Bury, UK
2. Allied Health Research Unit, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK
Abstract
Objective: Effective pressure management for individuals is critical for hospital and community-based care, to prevent the occurrence of pressure ulcers. This study explores the impact of a new mattress and topper solution on interface pressure and comfort during supine lying. Method: In this quantitative, healthy cohort study, patient–surface interface pressures were calculated for three mattresses (a standard hospital mattress, a new mattress solution (Levitex Foams Ltd., UK) and a dynamic air flow mattress) with and without an innovative topper solution (Levitex Foams Ltd., UK). Subjective comfort, contact surface area, peak and mean pressure and peak pressure index (head, sacrum, heels) were calculated for all mattress conditions for a 21-minute period. Results: A total of 27 healthy volunteers took part in this study. The new mattress solution decreased peak pressure significantly compared with the hospital and air mattresses (p<0.04). Lower peak pressures were observed for the hospital mattress compared with the dynamic air flow mattress. The new mattress solution improved comfort and significantly lowered (>30%; p≤0.005) heel and head pressure compared with the other surfaces. Both hospital and air mattresses significantly reduced pressure and improved comfort with the addition of the new topper solution (p<0.05). Conclusion: The new mattress solution used in this study offers a potentially improved pressure management solution for individuals. Implementation of the topper may also help to improve pressure management when used with existing standard or dynamic air flow mattresses.
Subject
Nursing (miscellaneous),Fundamentals and skills
Cited by
1 articles.
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