Article Content

In the article that appeared on page 70 of the January/February 2022 issue, the Supplemental Digital Content Table 2 link and content have been updated; in Figure 1, phase 3, 205 clinicians has been changed to 204; the following sentences on page 74 before the Discussion have been revised to "Item 4 "Candidiasis (thrush) is one of the most common secondary bacterial infections associated with IAD" was revised by removing the word "bacterial" and changing the answer to "TRUE" because we realized that the majority of respondents were interpreting the question as a fungal infection and it would be unfair to penalize them for getting it wrong. Table 2 presents the final instrument; and item 13 in Table 2 has been corrected to "Using soap and water with a washcloth is effective in preventing skin infections associated with IAD." The online article appearing at https://journals.lww.com/jwocnonline/pages/default.aspx is now correct.

 

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Barakat-Johnson M, Beeckman D, Campbell J, Dunk A-M, Lai M, Stephenson J, Coyer F. Development and psychometric testing of a knowledge instrument on incontinence-associated dermatitis for clinicians: The Know-IAD. J. Wound Ostomy Continence Care. 2022;49(1):70-77.