This is the second in the series about how to prepare your patient for wound care treatment. In Part 1 we covered Transfers, Patient Comfort, Pain Scales; if you missed Part 1, you can read it here
Part 2: Preparing the Patient for Wound Care
D. Premedication
- Assess for pain prior to wound care or debridement.
- Employ appropriate measures to eliminate or control the source of pain, e.g., cover wounds, adjust support surfaces, reposition the patient, provide analgesic as needed and when appropriate.
- Assess for pain during and after wound care or procedure.
- Medicate as needed: intravenous (IV), oral (PO), or sublingual (SL); allow time for the medical to take effect.
E. Time-Outs
- Dressing removal
- Debridement
- Procedures
- Repositioning
- Dressing application
F. Dressing Removal/Cleansing
- Dispose of contaminated dressings and linens in moisture-proof bags.
- Remove gloves and clean hands with alcohol-based sanitizer, or wash with soap and water.
- Clean the wound with normal saline or an approved wound cleanser.
- Place a clean towel or drape under the clean wound.
G. Sterile Versus Clean
- Sterile fields
- Free of any living organism
- Use of sterile drapes, instruments, glove, gowns
- Clean versus sterile technique
- Sterile technique requires all sterile supplies and instruments, including gloves, gown, mask, drapes.
- Clean technique requires disinfected, clean and/or sterile instruments, steril and non-sterile supplies, and clean gloves.
- Sterile fields
Source Reference: Wound Care Certification Study Guide, Second Edition by Jayesh B. Shah, MD, Paul J Sheffield, PhD, Caroline E. Fife, MD