Water heel effectief bij wondreiniging.*
Uit een klein onderzoek in Australië blijkt dat het schoonmaken van wonden net zo effectief met drinkwater kan gebeuren dan met welk ander middel ook. Ook met water bleven infecties achterwege en geneesden de wonden net zo snel als met de gebruikelijke middelen.
Water
for wound cleansing
Drinking
water could be a simple, cheap and effective way to clean wounds according to a
recent study by the University of Western Sydney and Sydney South West Area
Health Service.
Professor
Rhonda Griffiths, from the UWS School of Nursing, says the research arose from
an inquiry by community health nurses who needed evidence to support a common
practice and belief that showering patients with leg ulcers was both safe and
effective.
"In
response we searched for studies done by others on cleansing wounds using the
shower, however we were unable to locate any evidence to support the practice,"
Professor Griffiths says.
"So
we conducted a six-week double blind, randomised controlled trial in South
Western Sydney involving 35 patients with 49 wounds.
"None
of the wounds cleansed with tap water showed signs of infection and we found no
sign that the healing rate was slow.
"We
came to the conclusion that where there is access to tap water that is suitable
for drinking, it may be as effective - and certainly more cost effective - than
other methods," Professor Griffiths says.
"Although
the results need to be confirmed by a larger study, we believe that with this
simple, yet robust, trial we have uncovered evidence that could save nurses'
time, reduce costs and also make it easier to involve patients in their own
self-care of wounds.
"This research shows how a clinical problem identified by working nurses, can promote research to then go on to inform existing practice," she says. (Aug. 2006)