
Pressure injury prevention bundles were linked to fewer hospital-acquired injuries, but the evidence is weak
AI-summarized from the linked source. Educational brief, not medical advice.
Brief summary
A systematic review and meta-analysis found that pressure injury prevention bundles were associated with fewer hospital-acquired pressure injuries, but the certainty of evidence was very low.
What NurseJet pulled from the source
Across nine hospital studies in eight countries, prevention bundles of three or more components were associated with a lower hospital-acquired pressure injury rate (risk ratio 0.31) and a possible reduction in prevalence (risk ratio 0.55, which crossed the line of no effect). Seven of the nine studies were non-randomized and at high risk of bias, so the authors rated certainty as very low.
Why this matters for nurses
Pressure injuries are common, costly, and largely preventable through nurse-led skin care, repositioning, and risk assessment. This may matter for nurses because it supports continuing to use prevention bundles while being honest that the certainty is low, so consistent execution and local monitoring matter more than any single component.
Bedside takeaway
Be aware that pressure injury prevention bundles were associated with fewer hospital-acquired injuries, but the certainty is very low, so consistent execution and local monitoring carry the weight.
Explain this for my unit
Key takeaways
- Across nine studies, prevention bundles were associated with a lower hospital-acquired pressure injury rate (RR 0.31).
- The reduction in overall prevalence (RR 0.55) crossed the line of no effect.
- Seven of nine studies were non-randomized and at high risk of bias; certainty was very low.
- The two randomized trials showed non-significant effects.
Practice implications
- Keep delivering the core bundle reliably, including risk assessment, repositioning, skin inspection, moisture management, and support surfaces, focus on consistent execution and local audit, and document risk and prevention steps to support unit-level monitoring.
Limitations & cautions
- Certainty of evidence was very low, with most studies non-randomized and at high risk of bias. The review does not identify which specific bundle components matter most.
- AI-summarized from the linked source. Review the original article before applying to practice.
Citations
Exact source links
Public citations are filtered to exact credible source pages. Homepage-only or invalid links stay in admin review and are not shown here.
International Journal of Nursing Studies (PubMed)
International Journal of Nursing Studies (PubMed). The effect of pressure injury prevention care bundles on pressure injuries in hospital patients: A complex intervention systematic review and meta-analysis.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38642429/
Professional education only


