Nurses Helping Nurses
allnurses Network: Jobs | Books | Newsletter
allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
Home General News Blogs Articles Students Region Specialty
Wound, Ostomy, and Continence /

New Nurse - need help with wounds




Did You Know?
allnurses.com is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 328,794 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.
Aug 26, 2008 12:22 AM

New Nurse - need help with wounds


Hi,

I am a new med/surg nurse (3 months) and need help with which dressings to use on different stages of decubs. I realize different hospitals use different products, but if I could get a general idea of what to use when it would be great. Our hospital doesn't have a "wound class" for new grads unfortunately. Is there a website I can go to that will show me pictures of the stages and what products to use for each?

Thanks so much!

Chris


Bookmarks: Submit Thread to Digg Submit Thread to del.icio.us Submit Thread to StumbleUpon Submit Thread to Google

Search Tags
None
Top

 
4 Comments:

No. 1
from suzy253
Old Aug 26, 2008, 12:37 AM

Default Re: New Nurse - need help with wounds
Most dressing changes I have done on decubs have specific orders on what to use.
Top
 
No. 2
from RN1989
Old Aug 27, 2008, 09:00 AM

Default Re: New Nurse - need help with wounds
You need orders by the doc or protocols to follow that have been approved by the medical staff.

If your facility does not have a WOCN that comes around to assist you and you don't have protocols, consider getting your facility to research and write standing orders that are approved by all the docs so the docs can sign the orders later but you don't have to wait for an order to start treatment.

This is going to become even more important since Medicare/insurance will no longer be paying for treatments of pressure ulcers acquired in facilities.
Top
 
No. 3
from hello101
Old Sep 02, 2008, 10:43 PM

Default Re: New Nurse - need help with wounds
I am sorry to hear that your facility does not offer this!! You would think everybody should get on board with basic wound stuff since a lot of law suits are out there! Any how, there are a lot of info on wounds. You can Google this (ie Stages of wounds) and also look at images from google. Let me help you start out by you telling me what kind of products your hospital carries and I can tell you what it is for and the rationale behind it. Ask me specific questions and we can go from there. There is a lot of info on wounds...
Top
 
No. 4
from ETRNQC
Old Sep 07, 2008, 03:15 PM

Default Re: New Nurse - need help with wounds
Originally Posted by chrisg0705 View Post
Hi,

I am a new med/surg nurse (3 months) and need help with which dressings to use on different stages of decubs. I realize different hospitals use different products, but if I could get a general idea of what to use when it would be great. Our hospital doesn't have a "wound class" for new grads unfortunately. Is there a website I can go to that will show me pictures of the stages and what products to use for each?

Thanks so much!

Chris
Hi There.

For more information on staging pressure ulcers, go to the NPUAP website: http://www.npuap.org/ You can also refer to information on the RNAO best practice on prevention of pressure ulcers. http://www.rnao.org/Page.asp?PageID=924&ContentID=816. It is important to note that there is no recipe to wound care and that each wound must be treated individually. It is imperative to identify and manage the etiology first and foremost. Treatment options for each stage are well discussed in the RNAO's best practice's for pressure ulcers: http://www.rnao.org/Page.asp?PageID=924&ContentID=721. Patients with stage III, stage IV, unstageable, deep tissue injury and infected pressure ulcers should be referred to a WOC/ET nurse. It also requires a multi-disciplinary approach.

It is also important not to just focus on the dressing, but to focus on treating the whole person. Stage I usually just require you to get the patient off the ulcer. Stage II depend on location, +/- infection, and amount of exudate. I hope the info helps.
Top
 


Did You Know?
allnurses.com is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 328,794 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.

Thread Tools

Who's Online
447 members
4,074 guests
4,521
6

Nursing on worst job list

2

Reduce Rates of Spending on Nursing...

2

County Nurses Pact Seen As Symbolic

6

Gasping Misunderstood in Heart...

6

Nurse Reports Assault

0

EMERGENCY CARE A Mixed Grade

0

CDC: Salmonella Outbreak Spans 42...

0

Study Raises Doubts About Tamiflu...

7

Baby Dies As Bug is Found at Tot...

0

Gene Abnormality Found to Predict...


Sponsored Links
Health Care Degrees Online
Healthcare Degrees Online!


2

Rejecting the Transplant

1

"Transcultural Nursing...

9

It's up to you

3

My life in Ireland and US...still...

15

Hasidic Jew Admitted for Bone...

19

Day One in the Life of a Nursing...

20

Suicide On The Ward

20

Culture of Violence

6

My First Nursing Instructor

0

Matua and Joseph Smith Junior, a...


Current Readers: 1



Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the Nurse-zine Newsletter.
Enter email address: