Looking Beneath the Skin to Prevent Nursing Home Pressure Ulcers
In 2020, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported 1.3 million people were living in nursing homes, and that number is expected to double by 2050. The CDC also reports that one in 10 nursing home residents will develop pressure injuries, or bedsores, a medical condition where skin and tissue breaks down because of prolonged pressure from sitting or lying long periods of time, introducing the risk of serious infection and even death.

色控传媒 (DUSON) Professor Tracey Yap, Ph.D., RN, WCC, CNE, FGSA, FAAN, specializes in geriatric nursing and is a senior fellow in the 色控传媒 University Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development. For years she has focused her research on intervention studies aimed at using technology in the nursing home to help nursing staff with repositioning residents who are sedentary and at risk for developing pressure injuries. Yap鈥檚 most recent work involves implementing a study that is using an SEM scanner, a device that checks for sub-epidermal moisture, which makes tissue vulnerable.
鈥淓very time the nursing staff do skin checks, when they bathe someone, or change them, they can use this little scanner and it will tell you beforehand if damage is beginning before you can even see it,鈥 Yap said, noting that this is particularly significant for those with darker skin tones. 鈥淒arker skin toned people end up with not only more pressure injuries than their white [tone] counterparts, but they鈥檙e more severe injuries. And that鈥檚 because we rely on visualizations of whether something is starting to get damaged.鈥
The scanner is used on a person鈥檚 heels and tailbone, and identifies inflammation and edema, which then cues the nursing staff to begin preventative measures to avoid pressure injuries, such as repositioning. Technology like the SEM scanner is proactive and preventative; by the time reddened skin is visibly detectable, significant damage has already occurred. The five-year National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR) study, for which Yap is co-principal investigator, is happening in nursing homes across the country and is in its second year. 鈥淪ome people never heal, and you cannot control the pain. They can get infections and die,鈥 Yap said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very sad thing.鈥
Driven by the lack of research in the area, Yap has dedicated her career to finding ways to help nurses improve care through evidence-based practices. One recent study Yap implemented used the LEAF Patient Monitoring System, which keeps track of repositioning schedules and cues nursing staff when a resident needs to be moved. An accelerometer, a device the size of a quarter, is attached to the resident鈥檚 chest and digitally connects to hallway computer monitors used by nursing staff to indicate which residents are next in rotation for repositioning.
Yap鈥檚 study, the results of which were published in 2022, also found there was no significant difference in pressure injury status when the resident was repositioned using two-, three- or four-hour intervals. The findings are important because the current two-hour protocol, which started with Florence Nightingale, disrupts sleep, which can affect mental health and cognitive behavior, Yap said. It can also be painful for people with injuries and reduce quality of life. Nursing staff become more susceptible to back injuries, especially when repositioning heavier residents. 鈥淚t鈥檚 bad news all the way around,鈥 Yap said. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e able to say, I鈥檓 going to come in every four hours, that鈥檚 a game changer for patients/staff/and the overall system.鈥
Yap鈥檚 work around supporting nurses who do patient repositioning has motivated her to understand and improve upon best practices and evidence-based research. Pressure injuries are a highly litigious area of health care, second only to wrongful death, and lawsuits often hinge on the two-hour protocol, which merits examination, Yap said. Improving the current standard of care for pressure injuries can only happen with more investigation. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a pretty great journey,鈥 Yap said of her research career. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not sexy, but it鈥檚 work that needs to be done. Somebody鈥檚 got to do it.鈥