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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
Perineal and Incontinence Care
Providing perineal and incontinence care are two of the most important responsibilities entrusted to caregivers in long-term care facilities.
Thorough care provides comfort and reduces odors and helps residents maintain their dignity and feeling of self-worth.
Careful perineal/incontinence care also preserves skin and helps prevent perineal dermatitis.
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Providing good perineal care can have a positive effect on the well-being and self-esteem of your residents.
Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
Perineal Dermatitis
Perineal dermatitis is often associated with incontinence and ranges in severity from redness to areas with open abrasions.
– Urinary incontinence rates between 30-50% have been reported for long-term care residents.1
Up to half of elderly long-term care residents are incontinent of stool.1
– Perineal dermatitis develops in a third of patients with fecal incontinence. 1
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Perineal dermatitis causes itching and pain and can increase the risk for urinary tract infection, skin infection, and pressure ulcers.
Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
Perineal Dermatitis
In one study, 56.7% of patients with pressure ulcers also had fecal incontinence, making fecal incontinence one of the most common risk factors for pressure ulcers.1
The clinical practice guidelines of the Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) recommend keeping the skin clean and dry and applying an incontinence skin protectant after each episode of incontinence.2
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Residents at risk for perineal dermatitis should have routine perineal skin care that includes gentle cleansing and the application of a moisture barrier.
Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
Perineal Skin Damage
Even though painful and preventable, perineal skin damage occurs in as many as 41% of adults in long term care.3
Perineal skin damage may progress rapidly to ulceration and secondary infection including bacterial and yeast infections which increase discomfort and treatment costs, and compromise quality of life.3
Preventive cleansing and application of a protectant reduce the incidence of pressure ulcers by as much as 59%.1
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
Perineal and Incontinence Care
Accepting help with something as personal as perineal or incontinence care can represent a loss of privacy and self-esteem to the resident.
Respect the resident’s dignity:– Keep the door closed
– Talk with the resident and explain what you are doing
– Expose only the area to be cleansed
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
Optimal perineal/ incontinence care requires:
The right product
The right process
Staff compliance
Perineal and Incontinence Care
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
Perineal and Incontinence Care Basics
Preserve the resident’s skin: Use warm, not hot water Avoid force or friction – be gentle Fold the washcloth to provide a softer surface for cleansing
Use Standard Infection Control Precautions: Always wear gloves for perineal/incontinence care –
add an apron or gown per facility policy While wearing gloves, avoid contaminating environmental
surfaces and supplies Put on clean gloves to apply perineal cream or ointment
Minimize opportunities to spread contamination: Remove excess fecal material with diaper or disposable wipe Cleanse from the area of least contamination to the area of
most contamination Refold and change cloths to prevent spreading contamination
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
Standards of Care in Long-term Care Facilities (LTCFs)
Regulations from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) establish standards for LTCFs
Regulations are divided into 2 parts1) Written regulatory statements are labeled by F-tags and a
number. F-tag is jargon for the actual regulation as published in the Federal Register.*
2) Interpretative Guidelines are used for enforcing the regulations. These consist of an explanation of the intent of the regulation, definitions of terms, and instructions for determining compliance with the regulation. Interpretative Guidelines are continually revised by CMS and are used during surveys of long-term care facilities.
*The Federal Register is the official journal of the Federal Government of the United States and contains proposed rules, new regulations, and public notices of government agencies.
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
CMS F-Tag 314: Pressure Sores
Residents who enter facility without pressure sores do not develop pressure sores unless the individual’s clinical condition demonstrates that they were unavoidable.
A resident having pressure sores receives necessary treatment and services to promote healing, prevent infection, and prevent new sores from developing.
Identify risk factors including exposure of skin to urine and fecal incontinence.
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
CMS F-Tag 315: Urinary Incontinence
Skin related complications: Frequent washing with soap and water
can dry the skin, use of perineal rinse may be indicated.
Moisturizers help preserve the moisture in the skin by either sealing in existing moisture or adding moisture to the skin.
Moisturizers should be used sparingly – if at all – on macerated (soggy) or excessively moist skin.5
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
PROVON® 3 in 1 Wash Cream
A single product for complete, no-rinse bathing and perineal care
Cleans, moisturizes and helps reduce odors in one step
Gentle cleansing agent loosens dirt, urine and stool from the skin and reduces the amount of force or friction needed during bathing and incontinence care
Moisturizes the skin with 10 conditioning agents
pH balanced Dermatologist tested and dye-free12
Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
PROVON® 3 in 1 Wash CreamPerineal Cleansing
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Females Cleanse groin and both
outer labia Refold cloth to unused
surface Separate labia and
cleanse downward, wiping toward rectum
Use additional cloths as necessary
Place cloths in soiled linen bag
Males Cleanse the penis - tip to base For uncircumcised male, gently
push foreskin back, cleanse tip of penis, and replace foreskin
Refold cloth to unused surface, cleanse groin, then scrotum - wipe toward rectum
Use additional cloths as necessary
Place cloths in soiled linen bag
Prepare cloth(s) by adding 2-3 pumps of product to each warm, damp cloth
Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
PROVON® Perineal WashPerineal Cleansing
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Remove excess fecal matter. Apply product to warm damp wash cloth(s). Gently clean entire perineal area, always wiping from front to back. Repeat with additional washcloths as needed.
Benefit of not using basin of water for perineal cleansing – proven to be reservoir for bacteria and potential source of transmission of healthcare acquired infections.4
Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
PROVON® Perineal Skin Protectant Ointment with 99% Petrolatum
Water-resistant skin protectant thatacts as a moisture barrier Barriers shield skin from exposure
to irritants and moisture. Provides temporary barrier to urine
and fecal matter.
– Helps protect red, irritated skin.
Contains petrolatum (skin protectant), skin conditioning agents and fragrance.
– Non-greasy
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
PROVON® Perineal Skin Protectant Ointment with 60% Petrolatum
Creamier consistency than Perineal Skin Protectant Ointment with 99% Petrolatum.
Water-resistant skin protectant that acts as a moisture barrier.
Barriers shield skin from exposure to irritants and moisture
Provides temporary barrier to urine and fecal matter
– Helps protect red, irritated skin
Contains petrolatum (skin protectant), skin conditioning agents and fragrance
– Non-greasy
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
Applying PROVON® Perineal Skin Protectant Ointment with Petrolatum
Apply after skin has been cleansed and patted dry.
Apply a continuous, light film to the perineum, buttocks, and especially to the sacrum.
Apply with a gentle touch – no aggressive rubbing.
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
References
1. Driver DS. Perineal dermatitis in critical care patients. Critical Care Nurse 2007;27:42-46.
2. Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society. Guideline for Prevention and Management of Pressure Ulcers. WOCN Clinical Practice Guideline No. 2. Glenview, IL: Wound, Ostomy & Continence Nurses Society; 2003.
3. Nix, D. (2010). Prevention and Treatment of Perineal Skin Breakdown Due to Incontinence. Ostomy Wound Management 52(4).
4. Johnson, D. et.al. (2009) Patients’ bath basins as potential source of infection: A multicenter sampling study. American Journal of Critical Care 18(1) 31-40.
5. http://www.cms.gov/manuals/Downloads/som107ap_pp_guidelines_ltcf.pdf p.195 Pressure Sores; p. 232 Urinary Incontinence
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care
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Routine Perineal Care and Incontinence Care19