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Pressure Map Technology for Pressure Ulcer Patients: Can We Handle the Truth?

Title

Pressure Map Technology for Pressure Ulcer Patients: Can We Handle the Truth?

Key Takeaway/s

In a 55-bed LTAC facility in North Texas, pressure mapping technology improved nursing practice, reducing average turn delays by 63% and median delays by 56%, thereby lowering risk of tissue damage. Read Full Article

Facilitating Student Nurses’ Learning by Real Time Feedback of Positioning to Avoid Pressure Ulcers–Evaluation of Clinical Simulation

Title

Facilitating Student Nurses’ Learning by Real Time Feedback of Positioning to Avoid Pressure Ulcers–Evaluation of Clinical Simulation

Key Takeaway/s

With the use of real-time pressure mapping feedback, student nurses were able to significantly reduce interface pressure compared to repositioning without the system, demonstrating its value in teaching effective pressure ulcer prevention. Read Full Article

Pressure Mapping: A New Path to Pressure-Ulcer Prevention

Title

Pressure Mapping: A New Path to Pressure-Ulcer Prevention

Key Takeaway/s

This clinical article from American Nurse explains that pressure mapping provides visual, real-time information on pressure distribution, allowing clinicians to see high-pressure areas and verify whether repositioning and support surface interventions are actually relieving pressure, rather than relying solely on skin assessment or patient feedback. Read Full Article

The wound/burn guidelines – 2: Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment for pressure ulcers

Title

The wound/burn guidelines – 2: Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment for pressure ulcers

Key Takeaway/s

These Japanese Dermatological Association guidelines state that pressure injury prevention depends on confirming actual interface pressure. They direct caregivers to check sacral pressure with an interface pressure meter, reinforcing that effective repositioning must be guided by measured pressure rather than routine practice. Read Full Article

Understanding and Treating Suspected Deep Tissue Injury

Title

Understanding and Treating Suspected Deep Tissue Injury

Key Takeaway/s

A Henry Ford Hospital elderly patient presented with a deep tissue injury (DTI), which was fully resolved within 11 days using real-time pressure monitoring, with no additional ulcers developing. Read Full Article

Utilizing Bedside Visual Feedback to Enhance Effective Repositioning

Title

Utilizing Bedside Visual Feedback to Enhance Effective Repositioning

Key Takeaway/s

A 65-year-old long-term care patient at Glacier Hills with a non-healing pressure ulcer achieved complete wound closure within 3 weeks after the introduction of real-time bedside pressure visualization to guide repositioning. Read Full Article

Pressure Mapping with Visual Feedback to Enhance a Pressure Ulcer Prevention Program

Title

Pressure Mapping with Visual Feedback to Enhance a Pressure Ulcer Prevention Program

Key Takeaway/s

Henry Ford Health System utilized real-time pressure mapping with visual feedback to enhance pressure ulcer prevention, confirming effective repositioning for patients and gaining acceptance from caregivers and patients. The technology showed immediate benefits in identifying and adjusting patient positions to prevent ulcer development. Read Full Article

Risk of readmissions, mortality, and hospital-acquired conditions across hospital-acquired pressure injury (HAPI) stages in a US National Hospital Discharge database

Title

Risk of readmissions, mortality, and hospital-acquired conditions across hospital-acquired pressure injury (HAPI) stages in a US National Hospital Discharge database

Key Takeaway/s

Increasing HAPI stage is associated with higher in-hospital mortality, higher risk of other HACs, and 1.5 to 2x higher 30, 60, and 90-day readmissions. Read Full Article

Using Pressure Mapping to Optimize Hospital Acquired Pressure Injury Prevention Strategies in the Burn Intensive care unit

Title

Using Pressure Mapping to Optimize Hospital Acquired Pressure Injury Prevention Strategies in the Burn Intensive care unit

Key Takeaway/s

This Hopkins burn ICU study found that implementing real-time pressure mapping reduced HAPI-related care costs from about $6,750 to $3,800 per patient. These savings reflect direct pressure-injury treatment costs only (e.g., wound care), not systemic complications or extended hospitalization, and were driven by fewer and less severe pressure injuries Read Full Article

Implementing Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping Cost-Effectively into a Pressure Ulcer Prevention Program

Title

Implementing Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping Cost-Effectively into a Pressure Ulcer Prevention Program

Key Takeaway/s

At St. Anthony’s Medical Center, Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping enabled use of lower-cost support surfaces, reducing reliance on specialty rentals and delivering net savings of $19 per patient per day after including the cost of the visualization system itself. Read Full Article

Pressure Mapping: A New Path to Pressure-Ulcer Prevention

Title

Pressure Mapping: A New Path to Pressure-Ulcer Prevention

Key Takeaway/s

Pressure mapping gives clinicians immediate visual feedback on where pressure remains, turning “best-practice” repositioning into a teachable, repeatable workflow. It helps staff validate that a turn or support-surface change actually relieved pressure, rather than relying on skin checks, habit, or patient report. Read Full Article

Facilitating Student Nurses’ Learning by Real Time Feedback of Positioning to Avoid Pressure Ulcers–Evaluation of Clinical Simulation

Title

Facilitating Student Nurses’ Learning by Real Time Feedback of Positioning to Avoid Pressure Ulcers–Evaluation of Clinical Simulation

Key Takeaway/s

Real-time pressure feedback accelerates skills training by showing student nurses, instantly, whether a positioning change actually reduces interface pressure. This turns pressure-injury prevention from a theoretical lesson into a measurable competency and supports more consistent technique across learners and instructors. Read Full Article

The wound/burn guidelines – 2: Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment for pressure ulcers

Title

The wound/burn guidelines – 2: Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment for pressure ulcers

Key Takeaway/s

These guidelines reinforce a workflow principle: repositioning should be verified with objective interface pressure measurement. They direct caregivers to check sacral pressure with an interface pressure meter, moving practice from routine turning to measured confirmation. Read Full Article

Enhancing Support Surface Therapeutics and Decreasing User Error Using Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping

Title

Enhancing Support Surface Therapeutics and Decreasing User Error Using Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping

Key Takeaway/s

Continuous bedside pressure mapping functioned as a real-time “quality control” layer for staff by quickly exposing common setup and support-surface errors (eg, bottoming out, over-inflation, incorrect default settings) and guiding corrective actions at the bedside. Read Full Article

Confirming Effective Off-Loading and Repositioning Using Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping

Title

Confirming Effective Off-Loading and Repositioning Using Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping

Key Takeaway/s

Pressure mapping strengthened bedside workflow by allowing staff to visually confirm that a turn actually offloaded pressure, and by helping staff identify and remove hidden causes of high pressure (workflow-relevant problems that are easy to miss during routine care). Read Full Article

The Use of Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping* in the Management of Intensive Care Patients with Excessive Head-of-Bed Elevation Due to Medical Necessity

Title

The Use of Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping* in the Management of Intensive Care Patients with Excessive Head-of-Bed Elevation Due to Medical Necessity

Key Takeaway/s

When clinical requirements force elevated head-of-bed, pressure mapping supports safer, repeatable micro-adjustment workflows by showing staff when sacral pressures become excessive and guiding small positioning changes that meaningfully reduce pressure without disrupting the care plan. Read Full Article

Biofeedback of Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping to Optimize Effective Patient Repositioning

Title

Biofeedback of Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping to Optimize Effective Patient Repositioning

Key Takeaway/s

This work highlights the training and technique benefit of biofeedback: staff can use live pressure visualization to refine repositioning in real time and standardize “what good looks like,” improving consistency of technique across caregivers. Read Full Article

Visual Feedback of Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping to Optimize Effective Patient Repositioning

Title

Visual Feedback of Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping to Optimize Effective Patient Repositioning

Key Takeaway/s

Visual pressure feedback improves day-to-day nursing workflow by making repositioning more teachable and repeatable, helping caregivers quickly identify high-pressure areas and adjust positioning until pressure reduction is confirmed. Read Full Article

Reduced Pressure for Fewer Pressure Ulcers: Can Real-time Feedback of Interface Pressure Optimise Repositioning in Bed?

Title

Reduced Pressure for Fewer Pressure Ulcers: Can Real-time Feedback of Interface Pressure Optimise Repositioning in Bed?

Key Takeaway/s

Real-time interface-pressure feedback supports better bedside practice by helping nurses identify effective repositioning targets, increasing pressure-reducing interventions, and reinforcing technique through immediate confirmation rather than assumption. Read Full Article

12 Next
Self-turning for Pressure Injury Prevention

Title

Self-turning for Pressure Injury Prevention

Key Takeaway/s

When appropriate patients were identified as able to self-turn, real-time pressure visualization helped them reposition themselves reliably with clear, immediate feedback. This demonstrates that pressure visualization can actively engage patients in their own pressure management, supporting safer self-directed turning when clinically appropriate. Read Full Article

Patient Engagement through Advanced Pressure Visualization as a Component of Pressure Injury Prevention

Title

Patient Engagement through Advanced Pressure Visualization as a Component of Pressure Injury Prevention

Key Takeaway/s

This study frames pressure visualization as a patient-facing tool: by making pressure visible, it motivates participation and supports behavior change around repositioning. The work reinforces that engagement improves when patients can see the cause-and-effect of their own movement on pressure. Read Full Article

Evaluation of a Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping System to Measure the Effectiveness of a Patient Repositioning Intervention in the Prevention of Pressure Ulcers in Two UK Acute (Hospital) Orthopaedic Trauma Wards

Title

Evaluation of a Continuous Bedside Pressure Mapping System to Measure the Effectiveness of a Patient Repositioning Intervention in the Prevention of Pressure Ulcers in Two UK Acute (Hospital) Orthopaedic Trauma Wards

Key Takeaway/s

In a veteran population, pressure visualization was used not only to guide clinical care but to empower patients and caregivers with understandable, visual information about pressure risk. This supports greater patient involvement in day-to-day positioning decisions and reinforces shared accountability for prevention and healing. Read Full Article

Empowering Healthcare Providers and Veterans with Pressure Visualization Technology to Reduce and Heal Pressure Injuries

Title

Empowering Healthcare Providers and Veterans with Pressure Visualization Technology to Reduce and Heal Pressure Injuries

Key Takeaway/s

In two acute orthopedic trauma wards, patients and families reported the pressure visualization system was helpful, indicating strong engagement with the care process. The findings suggest that making pressure visible can improve patient and family understanding of repositioning goals and increase participation in prevention efforts. Read Full Article