Waterlow Score — Pressure Ulcer Risk
Compleição/peso para altura
Skin type — visual risk areas
Sex/Age
Continence
Mobility
Appetite
Special Risks
Neurological deficit (+4 to +6)
Guia detalhado em breve
Estamos preparando um guia educacional completo para o Waterlow Pressure Ulcer Risk Score. Volte em breve para explicações passo a passo, fórmulas, exemplos reais e dicas de especialistas.
The Waterlow Pressure Ulcer Risk Assessment Tool is a validated clinical scoring system developed by Judy Waterlow in 1985 and revised in 2005, widely used in the United Kingdom and Commonwealth countries for assessing the risk of pressure ulcer (pressure injury) development in hospitalised and community patients. Unlike the Braden Scale (which uses reverse scoring where lower scores indicate higher risk), the Waterlow uses a cumulative positive-scoring system where higher total scores indicate greater risk. The tool evaluates multiple subscales with corresponding point ranges: build/weight for height (0–3), skin type/visual risk areas (0–3), sex and age (1–5), continence (0–3), and mobility (0–5). Additional subscales include appetite (0–3) and special risk categories: tissue malnutrition (1–8 cumulative), neurological deficit (4–6), major surgery or trauma (5–8), and high-risk medications (4 for anaemia, cytotoxics, NSAIDs, steroids). Risk thresholds are: score ≥10 = at risk; ≥15 = high risk; ≥20 = very high risk. The Waterlow Score is endorsed by NHS Trusts in England and forms part of the NHS Improving Quality (NHSIQ) pressure ulcer prevention initiative. Its comprehensiveness makes it slightly more complex than the Braden Scale but potentially more sensitive for patients with complex multimorbidity. A key strength of the Waterlow tool is the inclusion of neurological deficit and medication effects, which are not captured in the Braden Scale. Tissue malnutrition categories (cachexia, cardiac failure, peripheral vascular disease, anaemia, smoking) reflect the microcirculatory and tissue oxygenation contributions to pressure ulcer pathophysiology.
Waterlow Score = Build/Weight (0–3) + Skin Type (0–3) + Sex/Age (1–5) + Continence (0–3) + Mobility (0–5) + Appetite (0–3) + Special Risks; ≥10=at risk, ≥15=high risk, ≥20=very high risk
- 1Step 1 — Build/Weight for Height: Score 0 (average BMI 20–24.9), 1 (above average BMI 25–29.9), 2 (obese BMI ≥30), 3 (below average BMI <20 — underweight/cachexia).
- 2Step 2 — Skin Type / Visual Risk Areas: Score 0 (healthy), 1 (tissue paper — fragile, very thin skin), 1 (dry), 1 (oedematous), 1 (clammy, pyrexial), 2 (discoloured), 3 (broken/spot).
- 3Step 3 — Sex and Age: Score male 1; female 2; add additional points for age: 14–49 yr = 1, 50–64 yr = 2, 65–74 yr = 3, 75–80 yr = 4, 81+ yr = 5.
- 4Step 4 — Continence: Score 0 (complete/catheterised), 1 (occasionally incontinent), 2 (catheter/incontinent of faeces), 3 (doubly incontinent — both urinary and faecal).
- 5Step 5 — Mobility: Score 0 (fully mobile), 1 (restless/fidgety), 2 (apathetic/dependent), 3 (restricted), 4 (inert/immobile), 5 (chairbound).
- 6Step 6 — Appetite: Score 0 (average), 1 (poor — eating less than half meals), 2 (NG tube / fluid only), 3 (NBM/anorexic).
- 7Step 7 — Special risks: Add tissue malnutrition points (cachexia, heart failure, PVD, anaemia, smoking = 1–8 cumulative); neurological deficit (diabetes, MS, CVA, motor/sensory deficit = 4–6); surgery/trauma (orthopaedic below waist/spinal = 5, >2h on table = 5); medications (steroids, cytotoxics, NSAIDs, anticoagulants = 4 total).
Maximum prevention: dynamic mattress, 2-hourly turns, heel off-loading, dietitian, wound care team
Underweight(3) + female+81+(7) + doubly incontinent(3) + chairbound(5) + NBM(3) + surgery>2h(5) = well above 20. Very high risk requires immediate comprehensive prevention plan.
Prevention: high-specification foam mattress; 2-3 hourly repositioning; skin inspection; reassess daily
Obese(2) + male+50-64(1+2=3) + catheterised(2) + restricted(3) + clammy(1) ≈ 10–11. At risk threshold met. Initiate standard prevention protocol.
Stroke patients with motor deficit: neurological score adds 4–6 points; pressure injury risk is very high
Female+65-74(2+3=5) + doubly incontinent(3) + restricted mobility(3) + neurological deficit(4) + poor appetite(1) ≈ 16–21+. Neurological deficit alone adds 4 points; combined with other factors = very high risk.
No specific pressure ulcer prevention required; standard skin care
Average build(0) + healthy skin(0) + male(1) + 14–49(1) + continent(0) + fully mobile(0) + good appetite(0) = 2. Well below the ≥10 threshold. Low risk.
NHS hospital admission pressure ulcer risk assessment for all adult inpatients to guide mattress prescribing and prevention protocols, representing an important application area for the Waterlow Score in professional and analytical contexts where accurate waterlow score calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Community nursing and district nurse assessment for housebound patients with chronic conditions and limited mobility, representing an important application area for the Waterlow Score in professional and analytical contexts where accurate waterlow score calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Care home and nursing home resident admission assessment for ongoing pressure injury risk management, representing an important application area for the Waterlow Score in professional and analytical contexts where accurate waterlow score calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Surgical pre-operative assessment to identify patients requiring pressure-redistributing theatre table pads and immediate post-operative mattress prescribing, representing an important application area for the Waterlow Score in professional and analytical contexts where accurate waterlow score calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
NHS pressure ulcer prevention audits and CQUIN metrics using Waterlow completion rates and intervention compliance as quality indicators, representing an important application area for the Waterlow Score in professional and analytical contexts where accurate waterlow score calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Patients with Spinal Cord Injury
{'title': 'Patients with Spinal Cord Injury', 'body': 'Spinal cord injury (SCI) patients score 6 points on the neurological deficit subscale and are at lifelong pressure injury risk from impaired sensation, impaired mobility, autonomic dysfunction causing poor peripheral circulation, and muscle atrophy eliminating natural tissue padding over bony prominences. SCI patients require custom pressure-redistributing wheelchair cushions, daily skin inspection, and education on independent pressure relief techniques (push-ups in chair).'}
Post-Cardiac Surgery
{'title': 'Post-Cardiac Surgery', 'body': 'Cardiac surgery patients are often placed on cardiopulmonary bypass (causing endothelial dysfunction and reduced perfusion), undergo prolonged theatre time (>2 hours adds points to surgery category), receive vasopressors post-operatively (peripheral vasoconstriction), and may be cooled. Combined with the standard post-operative immobility, these patients frequently score very high risk. Dynamic mattresses should be available in cardiac surgery recovery units as standard.'}
Steroid-Dependent Patients
{'title': 'Steroid-Dependent Patients', 'body': 'Long-term corticosteroid use (as in rheumatoid arthritis, COPD, organ transplant, IBD) contributes 4 points in the medication category and causes skin thinning, reduced subcutaneous tissue, and impaired wound healing. Even a Waterlow score that would otherwise be moderate becomes significantly elevated. Extra skin protection measures (transparent foam dressings, careful tape removal) are indicated.'}
End-of-Life Care
{'title': 'End-of-Life Care', 'body': 'In the last days of life, pressure injury prevention must be balanced against patient comfort and goals of care. Frequent repositioning may cause pain and distress in dying patients. The focus shifts from prevention to comfort care — ensuring skin is clean, dry, and protected from further breakdown, managing existing wounds for odour and pain, and ensuring the patient is as comfortable as possible. Document this change in care philosophy explicitly.'}
| Score | Risk Level | Key Interventions |
|---|---|---|
| <10 | Not at Risk | Standard skin care; encourage mobility |
| 10–14 | At Risk | High-spec foam mattress; 2–3 hourly turns; skin inspection; nutrition review |
| 15–19 | High Risk | Dynamic APM; 2-hourly turns; foam dressings; dietitian referral |
| ≥20 | Very High Risk | Continuous low-pressure mattress; wound care team; comprehensive nutrition; individual care plan |
What are the Waterlow risk thresholds?
Waterlow risk categories: score 10–14 = at risk; 15–19 = high risk; ≥20 = very high risk. Below 10 indicates no clinical risk requiring prevention intervention beyond standard skin care. These thresholds are used by most NHS Trusts in England and Wales, though some local adaptations exist. Higher scores correlate with higher pressure ulcer incidence rates in prospective validation studies.
How does Waterlow compare to Braden in clinical accuracy?
Both Waterlow and Braden have similar levels of predictive accuracy (AUC 0.60–0.75 in most validation studies) for pressure ulcer development. Waterlow tends to have higher sensitivity (fewer missed cases) but lower specificity (more false positives) compared to Braden, meaning it more frequently identifies patients who do not develop ulcers. In UK NHS settings, Waterlow is institutional preference in approximately 60% of trusts.
What special risks significantly increase the Waterlow Score?
The special risk categories can add 4–20+ additional points to the base score: major surgery (orthopaedic below waist or spinal = 5 points; other major surgery/trauma = 5 points; >2 hours on theatre table adds additional weight). Neurological deficit (motor/sensory impairment from stroke, SCI, MS, or diabetes) adds 4–6 points. High-risk medications (corticosteroids, cytotoxics, NSAIDs) add 4 points. These categories are absent from the Braden Scale.
What interventions are recommended for each Waterlow risk level?
At risk (10–14): high-specification foam mattress; regular repositioning (q2–3h); skin inspection; nutrition review. High risk (15–19): dynamic alternating pressure mattress; 2-hourly repositioning; protective foam dressings on bony prominences; dietitian referral. Very high risk (≥20): continuous low-pressure or lateral rotation mattress system; wound care team referral; comprehensive nutrition plan; individual care plan documentation.
Is the Waterlow Score validated for community nursing patients?
The Waterlow Score has been studied in community nursing and care home settings. Its inclusion of tissue malnutrition and medication categories makes it potentially more applicable to community patients with complex comorbidities than the Braden Scale. However, the EPUAP and NPUAP recommend any validated tool consistently applied with appropriate staff training and reassessment schedules.
When should the Waterlow Score be reassessed?
Initial assessment should occur within 6 hours of admission (NICE CG179). Reassessment frequency: at risk (10–14) — daily; high risk (15–19) — every shift or at minimum daily; very high risk (≥20) — every shift. Immediate reassessment is required whenever clinical status changes: new surgery, new incontinence, loss of mobility, cardiovascular deterioration, or new medications added.
Does the Waterlow Score guide specific mattress selection?
Yes — NICE CG179 and Trust protocols use Waterlow thresholds to guide mattress prescribing: at risk = high-specification foam overlay; high risk = high-specification foam replacement mattress (e.g., Repose, Nimbus); very high risk = dynamic air alternating pressure mattress (APM) or low air loss mattress. Seat cushions should be prescribed simultaneously based on chair-sitting risk.
How should Waterlow be documented in clinical records?
Waterlow scores should be recorded in the patient's nursing care plan or integrated patient assessment document with: the total score, the individual subscale scores, the risk category, the prevention interventions implemented, the planned reassessment date, and the name and designation of the assessor. NHS trusts require Waterlow documentation as part of pressure ulcer prevention audit criteria.
Dica Pro
In busy ward settings, quickly calculate Waterlow by identifying the highest-scoring domains first: age (up to 5 points), continence (up to 3 points), mobility (up to 5 points), and surgery (up to 5 points). Any patient who is elderly, doubly incontinent, immobile, and post-surgical will typically score ≥20 (very high risk) without even calculating tissue malnutrition or neurological factors. These patients need immediate dynamic mattress prescribing, not just monitoring.
Você sabia?
Judy Waterlow developed her pressure ulcer risk assessment tool in 1985 while working as a nurse tutor at Taunton in Somerset, England. She created it after observing that the Norton Scale (developed in 1962) was widely used but failed to capture important modern risk factors including nutrition, skin type, and medications. The 2005 revision incorporated advances in pressure ulcer science over the previous two decades and added specific categories for malnutrition and medication-related risk. Judy Waterlow has since trained thousands of nurses internationally and continues to advocate for pressure ulcer prevention as a fundamental patient safety issue.
Referências
- ›Waterlow J — Pressure Sores: A Risk Assessment Card (Nurs Times 1985)
- ›NICE CG179 — Pressure Ulcers: Prevention and Management (2014)
- ›EPUAP/NPUAP — International Pressure Ulcer Guidelines (2019)
- ›Webster J et al. — Systematic Review: Pressure Injury Risk Assessment Tools (Int Wound J 2010)
- ›Judy Waterlow — Revised Waterlow Scale 2005 (Official)