Posts

Showing posts from July, 2026

Article # 11

  Using the Ipsilateral Arm in Patients With Breast Cancer: An Evidence-Based Practice Project and Practice Change   June 2025 • Volume 29, number 3, pages 212 - 218 • DOI: 10.1188/25.CJON.212-218   Kathryn L. Shady   Background: The ipsilateral arm is not used for blood pressure, phlebotomy, or IV access postmastectomy or post–lymph node removal or biopsy. The non–evidence-based practice of blanket forbidding of ipsilateral arm use can result in inaccurate calf blood pressure measurements, foot stick blood draw orders, and an increased need for tunneled central venous catheters.   Objectives: This project piloted a practice change and allowed for the use of the ipsilateral arm in patients with breast cancer.   Methods: The team used the Johns Hopkins Evidence-Based Practice Model to implement a practice change for hematology-oncology inpatients with breast cancer and lymph node involvement, removal, or biopsy, or mastectomy history.   Findings: T...