The Wound Centre

Catherine Anne Sharp

The Wound Centre provides everything you need to know about preventing and managing wounds, related OH&S, infection control issues and case studies. Subcribe to hundreds of articles and more published papers at http://thewoundcentre.com. You will receive regular emails and a free e-book "Sharp Clinical Solutions for the prevention and treatment of skin tears" that are supported by the episodes in this podcast series.

  1. Sleep Deprivation and the Sundowning Syndrome

    03/17/2025

    Sleep Deprivation and the Sundowning Syndrome

    Human rights and litigation. Sleep, like eating or drinking, is essential for living. Almost everyone has experienced the feeling of 'falling to pieces' after a night of poor sleep. Sleep and Alzheimers Gaur et al., (2022) described how inadequate sleep causes the aggregation of soluble amyloid beta protein and this may raise the likelihood of poor cognitive outcomes. One mechanism, they explained, is that, during slow wave sleep, the brain may be able to remove metabolic waste more effectively. In my opinion this puts an even greater responsibility on healthcare facilities to prioritise sleep for all patients and the main way this can be accomplished is to cease the two-hourly repositioning regimes, unless awake, use alternating pressure air mattresses, and let patients sleep.   Researchers are investigating the relationship between lack of sleep, or disturbed sleep, and a link with Alzheimer's Disease (Gaur et al., 2022; Gobraeil, 2022). Therefore, it is imperative that patients are given the opportunity to sleep all night without being disturbed and to be informed of alternative therapies and strategies. Informed consent is a person's decision, given voluntarily, to agree to a healthcare treatment, procedure or other intervention that is made: References Dimond, B (2003). Pressure ulcers and litigation. Nursing Times, 99(5) 5 Dube, A (2021).   Risk factors associated with heel pressure ulcer development in adult population: A systematic literature review. Journal of Tissue Viability https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtv.2021.10.007   Gaur, A., Kaliappan, A., Balan, Y., Sakthivadivel, V., Medala, K., & Umesh, M (2022). Sleep and Alzheimer: The Link. Maedica (Bucur), 17(1), 177-185. doi:10.26574/maedica. 2022.17.1.177   Ta-Wei Guu, Dag Aarsland, Dominic ffytche Light, sleep-wake rhythm, and behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia in care home patients: Revisiting the sundowning syndrome  2022  https://doi.org/10.1002/gps.5712   Gobraeil, S. Rizq, G (2022). What is the Relationship Between Sleep and Alzheimer's Disease? A Narrative Review. URNCST Journal, 6(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.26685/urncst.334

    6 min
  2. 02/17/2025

    Falls And The Late Effects of Polio (LEoP)

    Many people who acquired polio in their childhood experience new or increased impairments decades after their initial infection, so-called post-polio syndrome or late effects of polio (LEoP) [1]. Common impairments in persons with LEoP are muscle weakness, muscle fatigue, general fatigue and musculoskeletal pain during everyday activities and physical activities. The causes of LEoP are not clear, but it seems that the new impairments occur due to a distal degeneration of axons in the enlarged motor units that developed during the recovery of the acute paralytic polio. It is my experience as a nurse, that the LEoP are not mentioned in any falls risk screening tools in hospitals or residential aged care facilities and if staff don't know about it they won't know that a patient who may be able to walk around unaided may be at risk of falling because of the LEoP. Now my story…… My preference is for one-on-one supervision 24/7. That means three nurses/carers every day – one on each shift.   References Brogårdh C, Lexell J, Hammarlund CS. Fall-Related Activity Avoidance among Persons with Late Effects of Polio and Its Influence on Daily Life: A Mixed-Methods Study. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Jul 5;18(13):7202. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18137202. PMID: 34281139; PMCID: PMC8295840. Lexell J. Postpoliomyelitis Syndrome. In: Frontera W., Silver J., Rizzo J., editors. Essentials of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Musculoskeletal Disorders, Pain, and Rehabilitation. 3rd ed. Elsevier Saunders; Philadelphia, PA, USA: 2019. pp. 834–840. Dr Sherri Tenpenny podcasts and videos

    10 min
  3. 02/03/2025

    Falls Prevention Best Practice

    For older patients suffering from delirium or cognitive impairment, where it is unsafe for them to mobilise or transfer without help, individual observation and surveillance must be increased, and help with transfers must be provided as required. Ideally, one-on-one supervision should be applied for those patients with a mobility impairment for which they lack insight (eg cognitive impairment), and who impulsively attempt to exit their bed or chair without assistance. A fall happens in a split second and if there is no nurse in the immediate vicinity it is more likely than not that the patient will fall, sustaining a life-threatening fracture. There is evidence for the benefits of this approach from nonrandomised controlled trials. Bed exit alarms have not been assessed adequately in appropriate trials, but they are increasingly being used for similar patients, to alert nursing staff when a high-risk patient attempts to climb out of bed. I don't think that more research is required to see whether these devices are effective in reducing falls rates in hospitals and residential aged care facilities. My preference is for one-on-one supervision 24/7. That means three nurses/carers every day to remain with the patient the whole time.   References Donoghue J, Graham J, Mitten-Lewis S, Murphy M and Gibbs J (2005). A volunteer companion-observer intervention reduces falls on an acute aged care ward. International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance Incorporating Leadership in Health Services 18(1):24–31.   Preventing Falls and Harm From Falls  in Older People Best Practice Guidelines  for Australian Hospitals 2009. Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care (ACSQHC).

    8 min

About

The Wound Centre provides everything you need to know about preventing and managing wounds, related OH&S, infection control issues and case studies. Subcribe to hundreds of articles and more published papers at http://thewoundcentre.com. You will receive regular emails and a free e-book "Sharp Clinical Solutions for the prevention and treatment of skin tears" that are supported by the episodes in this podcast series.