Publication | Closed Access
Cost of Pressure Ulcer Prevention in Long‐Term Care
50
Citations
7
References
1995
Year
This long-term care facility expended substantial resources on prevention, and most resources (97%) were expended on less than half (30%) of subjects. Turning was, by far, the most expensive intervention, and the nursing staff reserved it for highest risk subjects. Strategies that substitute moderately priced mattresses for frequent turning may decrease the cost of prevention, as long as mattress cost is less than the daily turning costs it replaces. Future research to define the optimum combinations of preventive interventions for patients of various risk levels is needed.
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