Published
I second the barrier cream with stoma powder. It comes as a pre-made product from Aloe-Vesta (#3 barrier cream - the blue tube). The stoma powder allows it to adhere to open/weeping skin. When you wipe the pt's skin, you do *not* wipe off all of the barrier cream - just the top layer to remove the soil.
Aloe-Vesta also makes a protective cream without the zinc & stoma powder - its the #3 barrier cream, the green tube. It works well to protect the skin once it's healed over.
Calmo-septine works nicely as a barrier cream for intact skin, if you don't have access to the Aloe-Vesta products.
Amy2005
79 Posts
How can the skin of the buttocks and thighs be protected, when a
heavy patient wearing Attends is frequently incontinent (feces) - before
the skin gets all red/irritated/etc (seriously)?
The patient isn't able to be very cooperative right now.
The skin is in terrible condition now, it must be painful.
For some protection - zinc cream has been started.
But it is very excoriated.
There must be ways to: (1) prevent this from happening when it is known
that the patient will be incontinent (2) prevent this from worsening?
Any ideas?