Pressure Injury Prevention
3 Essential Principles for Older Adults
A safer plan goes beyond a fixed turning timetable: assess risk, protect the skin, redistribute pressure and act early when changes appear.
Pressure injuries can cause pain, infection and loss of function in people who spend long periods in bed or a chair. They develop from pressure, or pressure combined with shear, and may begin beneath skin that still looks intact.
Many injuries can be prevented or reduced, but prevention is not a simple three-item checklist. It requires an individual risk assessment, regular skin inspection, appropriate repositioning, pressure-redistribution equipment, moisture management, nutrition support and prompt clinical review.
1. Assess risk and inspect the skin every day
A pressure injury is localised damage to skin or deeper tissue caused by pressure, or pressure combined with shear. It may appear under intact skin or as an open wound and often occurs over the sacrum, hips, heels, ankles, elbows, shoulder blades or under a medical device.
Look for early changes
Check more than colour
Review changing risk
2. Reposition on an individual schedule
A fixed “every two hours” rule is not suitable for everyone. The interval should be based on the person’s risk, skin response, comfort, mobility, medical condition and the pressure-redistribution surface being used. No mattress or cushion completely replaces repositioning.
In bed
In a chair or wheelchair
Reduce shear
3. Protect the skin from moisture, dryness and friction
Clean gently
Use the right skin product
Do not massage pressure points
Check pads and linen
4. Select pressure-redistribution surfaces individually
People at risk generally need a pressure-redistribution mattress rather than a standard mattress. The best surface depends on body size, mobility, skin condition, moisture, comfort, posture, care goals and response to the equipment.
Mattress
Wheelchair cushion
Heels
Review effectiveness
5. Support nutrition, hydration and movement
Malnutrition, unintended weight loss, dehydration and reduced muscle mass can increase vulnerability and slow healing. Screen nutrition risk and request assessment by a dietitian or another suitably trained professional when intake is poor, weight is falling or a pressure injury is present.
Provide a balanced diet that meets energy, protein and micronutrient needs. Supplements should address an identified deficiency or clinical need; they are not routinely required when intake and nutritional status are adequate. Encourage safe mobility and activity within the person’s medical and functional limits.
6. Act early when skin changes appear
Immediately remove pressure from a suspicious area and contact a nurse, doctor or wound-care professional. Do not wait for the skin to open, do not apply unprescribed dressings or antiseptics, and do not continue positioning on the affected area.
Seek urgent medical advice
Urgent review is needed for hot, swollen or spreading red/dark skin, pus, foul odour, fever, severe or worsening pain, rapidly increasing wound size, black tissue, confusion or other signs of infection or systemic illness.
7. What families should confirm with a care provider
Ask how pressure-injury risk is assessed, how repositioning schedules are individualised and documented, how skin and devices are checked, what mattresses and seating cushions are available, how continence and nutrition are managed, and when wound-care or medical review is arranged.
Related KIN information: elderly residential care, elderly homecare and home physical therapy. Current staffing, equipment and inclusions should be confirmed directly with the selected branch.
Effective prevention combines an individual repositioning plan, careful skin and moisture care, appropriate support surfaces, heel protection, nutrition and early reporting.
A mattress or cushion helps redistribute pressure, but it cannot replace trained care and regular reassessment.
Choose a convenient branch
Please confirm current care scope, staffing and equipment with the selected branch.
Frequently asked questions
About pressure injury prevention and early action