4.6 Article

The role community-based healthcare providers play in managing hard-to-heal wounds

Journal

INTERNATIONAL WOUND JOURNAL
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/iwj.14402

Keywords

chronic wound; community healthcare provider; hard-to-heal wound; wound dressing; wound healing

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Many community-based healthcare providers without specialized training in wound care are responsible for managing various types of wounds. Failure to recognize and address issues that cause delayed wound healing can lead to increased costs and suffering. To encourage early intervention, a panel of wound care experts developed evidence-based recommendations for community-based healthcare providers to identify and treat hard-to-heal wounds.
It is common for community-based healthcare providers (CHPs)-many of whom have not received specialised training in wound care-to deliver initial and ongoing management for various wound types and diverse populations. Wounds in any setting can rapidly transition to a stalled, hard-to-heal wound (HTHW) that is not following a normal healing trajectory. Failure to recognise or address issues that cause delayed healing can lead to increased costs, healthcare utilisation and suffering. To encourage early intervention by CHPs, a panel of wound care experts developed actionable evidence-based recommendations for CHPs delineating characteristics and appropriate care in identifying and treating HTHWs. A HTHW is a wound that fails to progress towards healing with standard therapy in an orderly and timely manner and should be referred to a qualified wound care provider (QWCP) for advanced assessment and diagnosis if not healed or reduced in size by 40%-50% within 4 weeks. HTHWs occur in patients with multiple comorbidities, and display increases in exudate, infection, devitalised tissue, maceration or pain, or no change in wound size. CHPs can play an important initial role by seeing the individual's HTHW risk, addressing local infection and providing an optimal wound environment. An easy-to-follow one-page table was developed for the CHP to systematically identify, evaluate and treat HTHWs, incorporating a basic toolkit with items easily obtainable in common office/clinic practice settings. A flow chart using visual HTHW clinical cues is also presented to address CHPs with different learning styles. These tools encourage delivery of appropriate early interventions that can improve overall healthcare efficiency and cost.

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