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Apex Nursing

Reference — Wound Care

Pressure Injury Prevention Quick Reference

Pressure injuries (formerly pressure ulcers or decubitus ulcers) are largely preventable with consistent, evidence-based nursing care. Prevention is far superior to treatment in terms of patient outcomes and cost of care.

Educational use only. Prevention protocols should follow your facility's wound care policy, Braden Scale scoring results, and collaboration with wound care specialists when available. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Risk Factors for Pressure Injury

DomainRisk Factors
ImmobilityParalysis, sedation, post-operative state, severe illness, restraints, prolonged bed rest
Skin & MoistureIncontinence (urine/fecal), diaphoresis, wound drainage, edema — moisture macereates skin and increases friction
NutritionMalnutrition, low albumin/prealbumin, dehydration, inadequate protein intake, cachexia
PerfusionPeripheral vascular disease, diabetes, hypotension, anemia, vasopressor use
SensoryNeuropathy, altered consciousness — patient cannot feel or report discomfort from prolonged pressure

Repositioning

Repositioning relieves sustained pressure over bony prominences — the primary mechanical cause of pressure injury. Pressure + time = tissue ischemia.

  • Frequency: reposition at least every 2 hours for immobile patients in bed; every hour in a chair.
  • 30-degree lateral positioning: avoid direct pressure on the greater trochanter (hip); tilt to 30° rather than 90° side-lying.
  • Heels: keep heels fully offloaded using pillows or heel-offloading boots — place pillows under the calves, not under the heels.
  • HOB elevation: keep the head of bed at or below 30° when clinically safe to reduce shear forces — obtain a respiratory order if elevation is required.
  • Lifting vs. dragging: always lift — never drag — patients across surfaces. Use lift sheets or mechanical lifts to prevent friction and shear.
  • Turn schedule: document each turn with position, time, and skin assessment — visible in chart to ensure continuity across shifts.

Common bony prominences at risk: sacrum/coccyx, heels, greater trochanters, ischial tuberosities, occiput, scapulae, lateral malleoli, medial knees.

Skin Assessment

Perform a full skin assessment on admission and at every repositioning opportunity. Early detection prevents progression.

  • Inspect all bony prominences — sacrum, heels, occiput, elbows, hips, ankles at minimum.
  • Blanchable erythema vs. non-blanchable: press on a red area for 3 seconds. If it blanches (turns white) and color returns, it is intact. If it does not blanch, suspect a Stage I pressure injury and act immediately.
  • Assess under and around medical devices — NG tubes, oxygen masks, splints, casts, compression devices, and IV tubing all cause device-related pressure injuries.
  • Darker skin tones: non-blanchable erythema may not be visible — assess for warmth, firmness, bogginess, or pain at the site as indicators.
  • Document findings in objective language: location, size, color, presence of non-blanchable erythema, and any changes from prior assessment.

Moisture Management

Moisture increases skin fragility and friction, significantly raising pressure injury risk. Moisture-related injury (incontinence-associated dermatitis) is not a pressure injury but increases susceptibility to one.

  • Skin cleanser: use a pH-balanced, no-rinse cleanser — avoid harsh soap and vigorous scrubbing which disrupt the skin barrier.
  • Moisture barrier: apply a barrier cream or film (zinc oxide, petrolatum-based, or dimethicone products) to perianal and perineal skin after each cleansing.
  • Incontinence management: address the underlying cause; consider bladder training, scheduled toileting, and absorbent products — not as a substitute for skin care, but as a supplement.
  • Diaphoresis: change linens and gowns promptly; use moisture-wicking under-pads when available.
  • Wound drainage: contain and manage drainage from wounds to prevent peri-wound maceration.

Nutrition and Hydration

Adequate nutrition is essential for tissue maintenance and repair. Malnutrition significantly increases pressure injury risk and impairs healing of existing injuries.

  • Protein: adequate protein intake is the most critical macronutrient for tissue integrity and healing. Monitor albumin and prealbumin as markers of nutritional status.
  • Hydration: ensure adequate fluid intake; dehydration impairs skin turgor, perfusion, and cellular function.
  • Nutrition consult: refer at-risk or malnourished patients to a registered dietitian (RD) — consider enteral supplementation per provider order.
  • Vitamins and minerals: Vitamin C and zinc support wound healing; supplement as directed when deficiency is present.
  • Monitor oral intake: document percentage of meals eaten; report poor intake to the provider and care team.

Support Surfaces

Surface TypeUse CaseNotes
Standard foam mattressLow-risk patientsRoutine hospital mattress; not adequate for high-risk patients
Reactive support surface (foam overlay / gel)Moderate risk; pressure redistributionReduces pressure; does not replace repositioning
Active support surface (low air-loss, alternating pressure)High risk; existing Stage II–IV injuries; cannot tolerate turningDynamically redistributes pressure; requires maintenance and proper setup
Heel-offloading devicesHeel pressure injury or riskMust fully offload the heel — verify no contact with mattress

Support surfaces reduce pressure but do not eliminate the need for scheduled repositioning. Always assess support surface effectiveness during reassessment.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with NPUAP / EPUAP / PPPIA (pressure injury staging) · Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →