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Moisture-associated skin damage: aetiology, prevention and treatment

Moisture-associated skin damage: aetiology, prevention and treatment
Moisture-associated skin damage: aetiology, prevention and treatment
The concept of excessive moisture causing damage to the skin is not a new one, and provides a rationale for many fundamental nursing interventions. Although traditionally thought of as a specific problem of continence care, it is a common problem encountered in many different patient groups. As a consequence the umbrella term moisture-associated skin damage (MASD) has been introduced to describe the spectrum of damage that occurs in response to the prolonged exposure of a patient's skin to perspiration, urine, faeces or wound exudate. It is generally accepted that MASD consists of four main separate conditions, each having slightly different aetiologies, all of which will be explored in this paper. Careful assessment can help distinguish between the four and enable appropriate prevention and treatment interventions to be implemented. Whatever causes the excessive moisture, effective interventions should consist of the adoption of a structured skin care regime to cleanse and protect, methods to keep the skin dry, controlling the source of the excessive moisture and treating any secondary infection.
0966-0461
517-521
Voegeli, D.
e6f5d112-55b0-40c1-a6ad-8929a2d84a10
Voegeli, D.
e6f5d112-55b0-40c1-a6ad-8929a2d84a10

Voegeli, D. (2012) Moisture-associated skin damage: aetiology, prevention and treatment. British Journal of Nursing, 21 (9), 517-521.

Record type: Article

Abstract

The concept of excessive moisture causing damage to the skin is not a new one, and provides a rationale for many fundamental nursing interventions. Although traditionally thought of as a specific problem of continence care, it is a common problem encountered in many different patient groups. As a consequence the umbrella term moisture-associated skin damage (MASD) has been introduced to describe the spectrum of damage that occurs in response to the prolonged exposure of a patient's skin to perspiration, urine, faeces or wound exudate. It is generally accepted that MASD consists of four main separate conditions, each having slightly different aetiologies, all of which will be explored in this paper. Careful assessment can help distinguish between the four and enable appropriate prevention and treatment interventions to be implemented. Whatever causes the excessive moisture, effective interventions should consist of the adoption of a structured skin care regime to cleanse and protect, methods to keep the skin dry, controlling the source of the excessive moisture and treating any secondary infection.

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More information

Published date: 10 May 2012
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 338301
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/338301
ISSN: 0966-0461
PURE UUID: 31b886f5-b9e5-4e4a-8522-595601ac9afa
ORCID for D. Voegeli: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3457-7177

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Date deposited: 11 May 2012 15:57
Last modified: 26 Apr 2022 17:58

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Author: D. Voegeli ORCID iD

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