At first glance, it would appear that the number of Nova Scotia hospital patients with bedsores is rising dramatically.
In 2018, 10 were reported in the first quarter while only six were noted in the second.
However, the third quarter more than quadruples the previous one with 26 reported incidents.
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But the Nova Scotia Health Authority (NSHA) says there’s a reason for the sharp jump in the October to December data collection period.
“Each year in the third quarter … we do a prevalence study,” explained Colin Stevenson, VP of Quality & System Performance for the NSHA. “A dedicated team of clinicians assesses every single inpatient within the organization.”
Year over year, they say, the numbers are actually going down despite the appearance of an increase quarter to quarter.
“We’re actually seeing an improvement,” Stevenson said.
“That spike as a percentage of total patients has gone down each year over the last three years,” he explained. “Starting at 14 per cent, down to 12.5, down to just below 12 and this year down to approximately ten per cent.”
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The improving annual situation Stevenson said comes down to an increased focus on educating staff members on identifying sores earlier and more widespread understanding of how to treat them.
“That’s certainly, we feel, having an impact,” Stevenson said. “We’ve also seen across the province a few very specific or dedicated teams coming together to try to address it within care environments.”
“We’ve seen in those situations those particular facilities be able to substantially drop their rates as well,” he said.