Affiliation:
1. Tissue Viability Nurse Specialist Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust
2. Reader and Programme Director, School of Medicine, Cardiff University
Abstract
Assessment of pressure ulcer (PU) risk remains a challenge in clinical practice. The first part of this article ( Martin and Holloway, 2024 ) discussed the evidence base underpinning the development of clinical guidelines for PUs alongside the creation of the bundle approach regarding PU prevention. This article, part two, presents the results of a clinical audit that explores compliance against a PU prevention bundle (the aSSKINg framework) in an adult community nursing setting in the south-east of England. The clinical audit was conducted between July-December 2021 and included records of 150 patients. Overall, compliance against the aSSKINg framework was poor, with only two criterion being met: equipment provision for chair and referral to the tissue viability team. Short-term recommendations are that mandatory PU training for staff in the management of PUs should be implemented, and the tissue viability nurse network should be increased. The long-term recommendation was the introduction of the aSSKINg framework as a template into the electronic patient record.