Treating chronic wounds in an acute care setting: the forgotten diagnosis.

Publication Title

Wound Manag Prev

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

3-1-2024

Keywords

washington; spokane; covid-19; Humans; Chronic Disease; Wound Healing; COVID-19; Wounds and Injuries; United States; Diabetic Foot; SARS-CoV-2; Pressure Ulcer

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Chronic wounds include lower extremity ulcers, diabetic foot ulcers, and pressure injuries, and can take months or years to heal. Wounds place a high burden on outpatient and inpatient care settings. This burden is expected to increase markedly in the United States as the population ages and with increased rates of diabetes, obesity, and COVID-19.

PURPOSE: To articulate the effect of chronic, hard-to-heal wounds on acute care facilities, and how a few days of inpatient care can have a significant effect on the healing trajectory.

METHODS: An expert panel of 7 members, all with extensive knowledge and experience in the assessment and treatment of chronic wounds in an acute care setting, was convened in March 2022. The panel discussed the role of hospitals as part of the longer-term healing pathway of chronic wounds.

RESULTS: Chronic wounds have a significant effect on hospitals that includes unseen costs, bed occupancy, demands on bedside nurses, and wound complications that lead to extended stays or readmissions. A successful inpatient wound program offers appropriate identification of previously undiagnosed wounds, elevation of bedside care through simplified protocols, quickly and easily understood education and easy dressing selection, and comprehensive discharge planning with a multidisciplinary team for continuity of care and reduced risk of readmission.

CONCLUSION: Hospitals can play a key role in the management of chronic wounds, thus reducing the effect on each facility and the wider care network.

Clinical Institute

Digestive Health

Clinical Institute

Kidney & Diabetes

Specialty/Research Institute

Critical Care Medicine

Specialty/Research Institute

Infectious Diseases

Specialty/Research Institute

Gastroenterology

DOI

10.25270/wmp.22085

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