Assessing pressure injury risk using a single mobility scale in hospitalised patients: a comparative study using case-control design

Author:

Mordiffi Siti Zubaidah1ORCID,Kent Bridie2,Phillips Nicole M.3,Choon Huat Gerald Koh4

Affiliation:

1. Assistant Director of Nursing, Nursing Department, National University Hospital, Singapore

2. Professor in Leadership in Nursing, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Plymouth University, UK

3. Professor of Nursing, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia; Quality and Patient Safety Research Centre, Deakin University, Australia

4. Associate Professor, Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of Singapore, Singapore

Abstract

Background Pressure injury is known to cause not only debilitating physical effects, but also substantial psychological and financial burdens. A variety of pressure injury risk assessment tools are in use worldwide, which include a number of factors. Evidence now suggests that assessment of a single factor, mobility, may be a viable alternative for assessing pressure injury risk. Aims The aim of this study was to ascertain whether using the Braden mobility subscale alone is comparable to the full Braden scale for predicting the development of pressure injury. Methods This study, a retrospective case-control design, was conducted in a large tertiary acute care hospital in Singapore. Medical records of 100 patients with hospital-acquired pressure injury were matched with 100 medical records of patients who had no pressure injury at a 1:1 ratio. Results Patients who were assessed using the Braden mobility subscale as having ‘very limited mobility’ or worse were 5.23 (95% confidence interval (CI) 2.66–10.20) times more likely to develop pressure injury compared with those assessed as having ‘slightly limited’ mobility or ‘no limitation’. Conversely, patients assessed using the Braden scale as having ‘low risk’ or higher were 3.35 (95% CI 1.77–6.33) times more likely to develop pressure injury compared with those assessed as ‘no risk’. Using full model logistic regression analysis, the Braden mobility subscale was the only factor that was a significant predictor of pressure injury and it remained significant when analysed for the most parsimonious model using backward logistic regression. Conclusions These findings provide the empirical evidence that using the Braden mobility subscale alone as an assessment tool for predicting pressure injury development is comparable to using the full Braden scale. Use of this single factor would simplify pressure injury risk assessment and support its use within busy clinical settings.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Research and Theory

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