203 search results for "questionnaire tools"

Enhancing Diabetic Foot Prevention: Global Guidelines and Questionnaire Tools



Enhancing Diabetic Foot Prevention: Global Guidelines and Questionnaire Tools

Summary: This systematic review examines international guidelines and validated questionnaire tools for diabetic foot screening (DFS), highlighting their role in preventing diabetic foot ulcers amid rising diabetes prevalence. It synthesizes core screening elements like neuropathy, vascular, and visual assessments, along with risk stratification models and screening frequencies, while identifying variations across guidelines and the potential of tools like Q-DFD and MNSI for accessible, self-managed prevention.

Key Highlights:

  • Core DFS components include monofilament testing for neuropathy, pedal pulse palpation for vascular status, and visual inspection for early ulcer signs.
  • Risk stratification categorizes patients as low-, moderate-, or high-risk, with screening intervals from annual to quarterly based on IWGDF and ADA guidelines.
  • Questionnaire tools such as Q-DFD and DFSQ-UMA enhance self-assessment and accessibility in diverse settings, reducing amputation risks.
  • Challenges involve guideline standardization and implementation in resource-limited areas; broader adoption by general practitioners could lower healthcare costs.

Read full article

Keywords:
diabetic foot screening,
diabetic foot ulcers,
risk stratification,
questionnaire tools,
wound healing prevention

What’s Evolving in Podiatric Dermatology: Research and Tools to Elevate Practice

What’s Evolving in Podiatric Dermatology: Research and Tools to Elevate Practice

Summary: A cover feature in the September 2025 issue of Podiatry Today (Vol. 38, Issue 9) by Tracey C. Vlahovic, DPM, FFPM, RCPS(Glasg) highlights how podiatrists can better address common foot dermatologic issues by integrating tools borrowed from dermatology, biomechanics, and vascular disciplines—including dermoscopy, PCR testing, and nail video-capillaroscopy (NVC).

Key Highlights:

  • Persistent hyperkeratotic lesions (e.g., plantar helomas) may sometimes involve HPV; using diagnostic methods like dermoscopy, histopathology, or PCR testing can clarify resistant cases.
  • Nail video-capillaroscopy (NVC) and other vascular diagnostic tools offer opportunities to detect systemic vascular changes during comprehensive diabetic assessments.
  • The article challenges podiatrists to rethink lesion evaluation—moving beyond mechanical treatment alone and toward broader, evidence-based diagnostic strategies.
  • Though these tools show promise, implementation barriers such as cost and access to specialized testing persist, and broader validation is needed via multicenter studies.

Read the full feature on Podiatry Today

Keywords:
dermatology tools,
plantar lesions,
dermoscopy,
PCR testing,
nail video-capillaroscopy (NVC),
Tracey C. Vlahovic

What’s Evolving in Podiatric Dermatology: Research and Tools to Elevate Practice



What’s Evolving in Podiatric Dermatology: Research and Tools to Elevate Practice

Summary: Dr. Tracey Vlahovic’s case study reviews emerging tools/research: efinaconazole 10% for onychomycosis (13.6% cure in elderly), Brannock device for retronychia (half-size discrepancies cause trauma), nailfold videocapillaroscopy (NVC) for diabetic microvascular changes, and HPV in intractable plantar keratosis (IPK). These elevate podiatric dermatology by enabling precise diagnosis and treatment of conditions like DFUs/ulcers.

Key Highlights:

  • Efinaconazole: 13.6% cure in elderly; compatible with gel polish for adherence.
  • Brannock: Detects discrepancies causing nail trauma (e.g., retronychia case).
  • NVC: Noninvasive microvascular screening in T2D for early nephropathy/ulcer risk.
  • HPV in IPK: PCR confirms viral role; shifts to antivirals like cryotherapy.
  • Insights: Interdisciplinary tools challenge paradigms for better diabetic skin care.

Read case study

Keywords: podiatric dermatology, efinaconazole, NVC, HPV IPK, diabetic skin, Tracey Vlahovic

Skin Substitutes in Wound Care: Powerful Tools or Growing Controversy?



Skin Substitutes in Wound Care: Powerful Tools or Growing Controversy?

Summary: In a candid conversation, Dr. John Steinberg and Dr. Ben Pearl discuss the current state of skin substitutes (also known as Cellular and/or Tissue-Based Products – CTPs). They emphasize that these advanced skin replacement grafts are highly effective tools for hard-to-heal diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) and venous leg ulcers when standard of care fails. However, they also raise strong concerns about dramatic price inflation, rebate/kickback practices, and the risk that widespread abuse could lead to restricted access or payer backlash that harms legitimate patient care.

Key Highlights:

  • Skin substitutes can significantly accelerate healing and help prevent amputations in chronic, non-healing wounds
  • Strong clinical evidence supports their use in appropriate patients after adequate debridement, offloading, and vascular optimization
  • Major concern: Some products are billed at extremely high prices (e.g., tens of thousands of dollars) with questionable added value
  • Warning that unethical pricing and rebate practices may trigger severe reimbursement restrictions, limiting access for patients who truly benefit
  • Call for responsible use, transparent pricing, and focus on proven clinical outcomes

Watch the full discussion (YouTube Short)

Clinical Takeaway: Skin substitutes remain a valuable advanced therapy in modern wound care when used judiciously. The challenge for the field is to preserve access to these effective tools while addressing pricing and utilization issues that threaten their long-term viability.

Keywords: skin substitutes, CTPs wound care, diabetic foot ulcer grafting, skin replacement therapy, John Steinberg

Several prediction tools provide “objective” post-amputation outcome forecasts, but further work is needed

A recent systematic review and narrative synthesis has found several tools that demonstrate “acceptable-to-outstanding discrimination” for predicting key outcomes following major lower limb amputation. However, authors Ryan A Preece (Royal Gwent Hospital, Cardiff, UK) and colleagues note that “additional robust external validation” is needed to strengthen the clinical applicability of the prediction tools assessed. This research appeared online in the European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery (EJVES).

AI in Wound Assessment: Transforming Chronic Wound Care

AI in Wound Assessment: Transforming Chronic Wound Care

Artificial intelligence (AI) is revolutionizing wound care by transforming how clinicians assess and manage chronic wounds. By automating measurements, enhancing diagnostic precision, and enabling remote monitoring, AI-powered tools address the shortcomings of traditional manual assessments, which are often subjective, time-consuming, and variable. From smartphone-based imaging to deep learning algorithms, AI delivers data-driven insights that improve treatment planning and patient outcomes for conditions like diabetic ulcers, pressure injuries, and venous leg ulcers. This article delves into AI’s impact on wound assessment, offering wound care professionals a glimpse into a technology poised to redefine clinical practice.

The Need for AI in Wound Assessment

Chronic wounds affect over 6 million Americans, costing healthcare systems billions annually. Accurate assessment is crucial to guide treatments, prevent infections, and accelerate healing. Yet, traditional methods—ruler measurements, visual inspections—rely on clinician experience, leading to inconsistencies. AI overcomes these barriers with standardized, objective analysis. Tools like Healthy.io’s Minuteful for Wound use smartphone cameras with calibration markers to capture high-resolution images, instantly measuring wound dimensions and classifying tissue types (granulation, necrotic, epithelialization). Such automation saves time, reduces errors, and allows clinicians to focus on patient care rather than documentation.

Key Highlights:

  • Automated Precision: AI systems like eKare’s inSight measure wound size and tissue composition with 94% accuracy, outperforming manual methods. Deep learning models, such as U-Net, segment wound areas precisely, ensuring reliable data for clinical decisions.
  • Advanced Diagnostics: AI tools, including Spectral AI’s DeepView SnapShot, predict healing potential and identify infection risks early. These capabilities enable proactive interventions, improving outcomes for complex wounds.
  • Telemedicine Integration: AI apps facilitate remote monitoring, allowing patients to upload wound images for real-time clinician review. This enhances access for rural or bedbound patients, reducing hospital visits.
  • Future Potential: AI could integrate with wearables and predictive analytics to forecast complications like amputations. Research continues to address challenges like limited datasets and tissue segmentation accuracy.

Clinical and Economic Benefits

AI’s precision in wound assessment drives significant clinical and economic advantages. By detecting subtle changes in wound characteristics—such as early signs of infection or delayed healing—AI supports tailored treatments, from selecting optimal dressings to initiating therapies like negative pressure wound therapy. Early intervention reduces infection rates and hospital readmissions, critical given chronic wounds’ $20–$30 billion annual U.S. cost. AI’s telemedicine capabilities also empower patients, improving adherence and satisfaction. For clinicians, AI tools integrate into workflows, enhancing documentation for reimbursement and freeing time for patient interaction. A 2024 review notes AI’s potential to standardize care across settings, from hospitals to home care.

Challenges to Overcome

Despite its promise, AI in wound assessment faces obstacles. Limited public datasets hinder model training, especially for complex tissues like necrotic areas, which vary in appearance. Regulatory approval, such as FDA clearance, is essential for credibility, but not all apps meet these standards. Clinicians must balance AI insights with clinical judgment to account for patient-specific factors, avoiding over-reliance. The PMC review emphasizes the need for robust clinical validation and diverse datasets to ensure AI tools perform reliably across populations, particularly for underrepresented groups.

The Road Ahead

AI’s future in wound assessment is brimming with possibility. Integration with wearables could enable real-time wound monitoring, while predictive analytics might forecast complications weeks in advance. Imagine smart bandages that alert clinicians to infection risks or AI models that personalize treatment plans based on genetic and environmental factors. As research advances, collaboration between developers, clinicians, and regulators will be key to overcoming current limitations. For wound care professionals, adopting AI tools now means staying at the forefront of innovation, delivering precise, patient-centered care that transforms lives.

AI in wound assessment is more than a technological leap—it’s a new era in chronic wound care. By automating assessments, enhancing diagnostics, and bridging access gaps, AI empowers clinicians to achieve better outcomes. Wound care professionals are urged to explore these tools, stay updated on advancements, and integrate AI into their practice to elevate care standards.

Keywords:
AI wound assessment,
Wound care,
Chronic wounds,
Deep learning,
Telemedicine

Best Practices in Debridement: Techniques, Tools, and Teamwork Across Care Settings

Best Practices in Debridement: Techniques, Tools & Teamwork

Vascular surgeon Dr. John Lantis and wound care specialist Dot Weir walk through a hands‑on demonstration from SAWC Spring 2025, covering sharp debridement best practices across inpatient, outpatient, and bedside settings.

Highlights:

  • Fundamental Preparation: Emphasis on cleansing both wound and peri‑wound areas (4–6 cm beyond edges) with low‑cytotoxic antiseptics—saline alone isn’t sufficient.
  • Sterile Setup & Patient Comfort: Use of barrier drapes (e.g., opened instrument packaging), proper positioning, informed consent, and pain control (topical or infiltrative lidocaine).
  • Instrument Technique: Sharp tools like #10 and #15 scalpel blades, curettes, scissors, and forceps are used at a 45° bevel that promotes healthy punctate bleeding without damaging tissue.
  • Hemostasis & Dressing: Techniques to manage bleeding—pressure, hemostatic agents—and post-debridement cleanse to prepare for dressing application.
  • Peri‑wound Awareness: Attention to skin beyond the wound itself, ensuring clean margins to prevent contamination and promote optimal healing.

This demonstration provides clear, actionable guidance to enhance debridement safety, efficacy, and patient comfort across care settings.

Watch the full video above or on the HMP Global Learning Network.

Keywords: debridement, sharp debridement, peri‑wound care, aseptic technique, pain management

Reflecting on AI in Wound Care

Reflecting on AI in Wound Care: Insights from SAWC Spring Keynote

Dr. Eric Lullove’s keynote address at the Spring 2025 Symposium on Advanced Wound Care (SAWC) in Grapevine, Texas, titled “Healing with Intelligence,” spotlighted the evolving role of artificial intelligence (AI) in wound management. His talk encouraged clinicians to view AI as an ally—not a replacement—in delivering better outcomes and streamlining care.

Key Themes:

  • From Reactive to Predictive: AI tools are helping clinicians shift from reactive wound care to data-driven, anticipatory decision-making.
  • Clinical Support, Not Substitution: Dr. Lullove emphasized that AI should support—not replace—clinical judgment by reducing administrative burdens and improving diagnostics.
  • Workforce Reinforcement: With a growing patient load and clinician shortages, AI offers scalable tools to manage time, triage effectively, and prioritize care intensity.
  • Awareness Gaps: A live poll revealed that 70% of attendees were unfamiliar with AI’s current role in wound care, highlighting the urgent need for education and integration training.
  • Ethical & Practical Concerns: Speakers warned about algorithmic bias, data security, and the need for real-world validation before widespread adoption.
  • Patient Engagement: AI-driven visualizations and adherence tracking can empower patients—bridging the gap between clinic and home care.
  • Call for Collaboration: The keynote ended with a challenge for clinicians, researchers, and technology companies to work together in shaping an ethical, equitable, and scalable AI future in wound care.

As AI tools continue evolving, the wound care community is urged to take the lead in guiding responsible implementation—ensuring that human-centered care remains at the heart of digital transformation.

Keywords:
AI wound care,
clinical decision support,
SAWC 2025,
wound care innovation,
digital health

Watch the full video on HMP Global Learning Network


🔬 Spotlight: AI-Enabled Tools Transforming Wound Care

Artificial intelligence is reshaping wound care workflows—from triage to treatment planning—by offering scalable support across clinical and home settings. These tools exemplify the next wave of innovation:

  • SmartWound® AI: A mobile imaging app that uses machine learning to assess wound dimensions, tissue types, and healing trajectory, enabling consistent documentation and decision support.
  • Thermal Texture Platforms: Non-contact systems like those used in diabetic foot ulcer surveillance apply thermal image analysis and pixel mapping to predict healing outcomes and flag high-risk wounds early.
  • Remote Wound Monitoring Apps: Tools like Tissue Analytics® or Swift® allow patients or home health workers to capture and securely transmit wound photos, supported by AI-driven alerts for deterioration or improvement.
  • AI Documentation Assistants: Integrated into EHRs, these tools reduce clinician burden by auto-populating structured wound assessments and prompting evidence-based interventions.

As AI adoption grows, these platforms can help bridge care gaps, support earlier intervention, and preserve clinical bandwidth—especially in settings facing provider shortages.

NPUAP Announces Release of Educational Tools for Wound Care Providers

PRESS CONTACT: Liz Posner, lposner@douglasgould.com, 646-214-0514, ext. 3

 

Washington, D.C. – June 15, 2017 – The National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel (NPUAP) announced bundle pricing of the new digital slide sets, designed to assist in the continuing education of health care professionals to prevent and treat pressure injuries.

 

Wound care providers working in acute care, post-acute care, home care agencies, and schools of nursing will benefit from the use of the slide sets. They include the 2016 Pressure Injury Staging System Teaching Slide Set and the Prevention of Pressure Injuries Slide Set, both available for $75 each, and the Treatment of Pressure Injuries Slide Set, available for $90. Buy all 3 for $199- a savings of over $40! All are instantly downloadable in PDF format at the NPUAP online store.

 

The Pressure Injury Staging System Teaching Slide Set is the result of the NPUAP 2016 Staging Consensus Conference. The Prevention of Pressure Injuries Slide Set and the Treatment of Pressure Injuries Slide Setare based on the current International Prevention and Treatment of Pressure Ulcers: Clinical Practice Guideline.

 

“The primary mission of the NPUAP is to improve patient outcomes in pressure injury prevention and treatment,” said NPUAP President Mary Litchford, PhD, RDN, LDN. “By incorporating the latest scientific evidence into the educational slide sets for teaching health care providers, the NPUAP is supporting its patient-focused mission.”

 

Wound care providers can find a number of other resources available on the NPUAP online store, including webinar recordings, books, and high-resolution photographs of sample wounds for educational purposes.

 

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About the National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel

The National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel (NPUAP) is the nation’s leading scientific expert on pressure injury prevention and treatment. Our goal is to insure improved patient health and to advance public policy, education, and research.

A New Chapter for the Diabetes and Metabolism Journal

Navigating the AI Revolution: A New Chapter for the Diabetes and Metabolism Journal

Summary: Published March 1, 2026 in Diabetes & Metabolism Journal (Vol. 50, No. 2, pp. 253–254; Korean Diabetes Association), this editorial by incoming editor-in-chief Junghyun Noh (Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Inje University Ilsan Paik Hospital, Goyang, Korea) announces the journal’s evolving policy framework for artificial intelligence use in scientific research and manuscript preparation. The editorial follows a broader trend across academic publishing: an Elsevier survey of 3,234 researchers from 113 countries found that AI tool use in research rose from 37% in 2024 to 58% in 2025, with expectations of continued growth. Dr. Noh identifies four core concerns the journal is addressing: (1) scientific integrity and originality, as AI-assisted text may contain inaccurate interpretations or fabricated references; (2) data and image fabrication risks, as advanced AI systems can produce synthetic datasets and manipulated figures that are difficult to distinguish from genuine outputs; (3) authorship and contributorship ambiguity, requiring clearer disclosure norms; and (4) the substitution risk — AI-generated text may appear fluent and grammatically correct while lacking the scientific depth, critical analysis, and domain expertise that peer-reviewed work demands. DMJ’s immediate policy response requires authors to disclose all AI tool use during manuscript preparation, data analysis, or figure development — specifying tools, applications, and confirmation that outputs have been verified for accuracy. This disclosure must appear in the Methods section or as a dedicated AI Assistance Statement and will be published with the article. The journal is also evaluating AI-based tools for editorial screening of data and image manipulation, training editorial staff, and signalling openness to well-conducted AI-methods studies in dedicated future formats.

Key Highlights:

  • New policy (immediate effect): all AI tool use during manuscript preparation, data analysis, or figure development must be explicitly disclosed, with tools named and AI-assisted content confirmed as author-verified for accuracy
  • Elsevier 2025 survey context: AI use among researchers rose from 37% to 58% in one year across 113 countries; most anticipate greater efficiency gains ahead — underscoring the urgency of journal-level governance frameworks
  • Four key integrity risks identified: fabricated or inaccurate AI-generated text; synthetic datasets and manipulated figures; authorship ambiguity; and substitution of AI fluency for genuine scientific judgment and domain expertise
  • Editorial safeguards in development: evaluation of AI-detection tools, particularly for image and data manipulation screening; enhanced training for editors and reviewers; engagement with cross-journal AI ethics initiatives
  • Openness to AI-methods research: if a sufficient body of rigorous, transparent AI-methods studies emerges, DMJ may create a dedicated section — focusing on drug development, risk assessment, predictive modeling, and precision medicine in diabetes and metabolism
  • Authorship principle maintained: AI tools may not be listed as authors; the corresponding human authors bear full responsibility for the accuracy, integrity, and originality of all submitted content

Read full article

Keywords: AI diabetes research publishingartificial intelligence wound care researchscientific publishing integrityAI manuscript disclosurediabetes metabolism journalLLM medical research

Junghyun Noh

HCPs’ Attitudes Regarding Current Wound Care Treatments

HCPs’ Attitudes Regarding Current Wound Care Treatments

A recent April 2025 survey published in *Wound Care Today* and sourced from the Journal of Community Nursing asked 789 healthcare professionals (HCPs) about their experiences delivering wound care.

Key Findings:

  • Time & Resource Barriers: 69% of respondents identified lack of time and resources as the primary challenge in managing wounds.
  • Patient Compliance Issues: 67% noted that non-adherence to treatment regimens complicated their work.
  • Access to Advanced Therapies: Nearly half (47%) reported limited access to advanced wound care options.
  • Training Gaps: 37% felt they lacked sufficient training, while 32% reported cost pressures as a barrier.
  • Overall Satisfaction: Despite frustrations, 63% felt “somewhat satisfied” with their ability to manage wound care.

These insights highlight persistent gaps in infrastructure, patient engagement, and professional development—all critical to enhancing wound healing outcomes.

Keywords:
Wound Care Today,
Journal of Community Nursing,
healthcare professional,
training gaps,
advanced wound therapies,
patient compliance,
resource constraints

Read the full article on Wound Care Today


🔬 Spotlight: Practical Tools to Support Wound Care Professionals

The latest survey of healthcare professionals highlights the urgent need for streamlined education, improved workflow tools, and access to advanced products. These solutions aim to support clinicians in delivering better outcomes while managing real-world constraints:

  • Digital Wound Care Platforms: Apps like Tissue Analytics and Swift Medical allow for fast wound documentation, measurement, and photo capture—reducing documentation time and improving care coordination.
  • On-Demand Clinical Training: Organizations such as the Wound Healing Society and WOCN Society offer free and low-cost e-learning modules, including case-based wound assessment, dressing selection, and offloading strategies.
  • Formulary-Accessible Advanced Dressings: Multi-function products such as Mepilex® Border or Hydrofera Blue READY® simplify care plans and reduce dressing change frequency, helping HCPs manage complex wounds more efficiently.
  • Patient Engagement Aids: Tools like visual education sheets, SMS-based adherence reminders, and caregiver training guides have been shown to improve compliance in both acute and chronic wound settings.

By combining point-of-care tech, evidence-based education, and patient-facing support tools, wound care teams can overcome many of the systemic and day-to-day barriers identified in recent surveys.

Challenges faced by doctors and nurses in wound care management during the COVID-19 pandemic in Turkey and their views on telehealth

AIM: This study aimed to determine the problems faced by physicians and nurses dealing with chronic wound care during the COVID-19 pandemic and their views on telehealth.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: A descriptive and cross-sectional design was used in this study. The sample comprised physicians (n = 74) and nurses (n = 271) interested in chronic wound care. Data were collected through a questionnaire form consisting of open- and closed-ended questions … read more

Factors associated with foot ulcer self-management behaviors

     among hospitalized patients with diabetes

 

In this cross-sectional design, researchers have identified self-management behaviors related to pre-hospitalized diabetes-related foot ulcers (DFUs) and examined the factors associated with these behaviors. A survey questionnaire was given to 199 hospitalized patients with DFU at a medical center in Northern Taiwan from June 2015 to June 2016. According to findings, 62.8% of participants never monitored their blood glucose level when they had foot ulcers, and 63.8% did not seek treatment for their wounds when their wounds were not painful. Data reported that DFU self-management behaviors were not enough. Following the control of demographic and medical variables, multiple stepwise regression analysis showed that the following 8 significant variables were related to DFU self-management behaviors: two DFU self-management barrier beliefs, foot self-care behavior, no treatment for diabetes, poor financial status, employment, knowledge regarding the warning signs of DFU deterioration, and number of DFU hospitalizations. They concluded that some modifiable factors and high-risk groups have been identified for inadequate DFU self-management behavior.

Read the full article on Journal of Clinical Nursing

Elevated obstructive sleep apnoea risk score is associated

     with poor healing of diabetic foot ulcers: A prospective cohort study

 

We studied 94 consecutive people (69% men) with diabetic foot ulcers (Type 2 diabetes,n=66, Type 1 diabetes, n=28) attending a university hospital foot unit. All participants were screened for obstructive sleep apnoea using the STOP‐BANG questionnaire, with a score ≥4 identifying high risk of obstructive sleep apnoea. The primary outcome was poor diabetic foot ulcer healing, defined as diabetic foot ulcer recurrence (diabetic foot ulcers which healed and re‐ulcerated in same anatomical position) and diabetic foot ulcer persistence (no evidence of healing on clinical examination). All participants were evaluated at 12 months … read more

What is the practice and understanding of podiatrists towards patient-centred consultations regarding diabetic foot care?

Background: Patient education is an integral part of diabetes management, yet research shows that increased knowledge alone does not translate into behaviour change. Behaviour change techniques (BCTs) have the potential to increase foot self-care and reduce the incidence of diabetic foot disease. Aims: The aim of this study was to explore the practice and understanding of podiatrists towards patient-centred support versus prescriptive instruction in consultations regarding diabetic foot care. Methods: The study was a cross-sectional design with a web-based questionnaire distributed to members of the College of Podiatry in the UK. Descriptive statistics, conceptual content analysis and the Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient were used to analyse the data. Results: Most respondents reported using BCTs in their consultations “often” or “very often” and that they “strongly agree” or “agree” that their consultations were patient-led … read more

What is the practice and understanding of podiatrists towards patient-centred consultations regarding diabetic foot care?

Background: Patient education is an integral part of diabetes management, yet research shows that increased knowledge alone does not translate into behaviour change. Behaviour change techniques (BCTs) have the potential to increase foot self-care and reduce the incidence of diabetic foot disease. Aims: The aim of this study was to explore the practice and understanding of podiatrists towards patient-centred support versus prescriptive instruction in consultations regarding diabetic foot care. Methods: The study was a cross-sectional design with a web-based questionnaire distributed to members of the College of Podiatry in the UK. Descriptive statistics, conceptual content analysis and the Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient were used to analyse the data. Results: Most respondents reported using BCTs in their consultations “often” or “very often” and that they “strongly agree” or “agree” that their consultations were patient-led, yet most were categorised as having a partial or poor understanding of these terms. Three themes emerged regarding barriers and facilitators, including ‘Skills and confidence’, ‘Patients do not want to take control … read more

Is Nanofat the Long-Awaited Treatment for Hypertensive Ischemic Leg Ulcers?

Background. Martorell hypertensive ischemic leg ulcer (HYTILU) is a chronic, hard-to-heal wound linked to hypertension. This study explores nanofat grafting as a regenerative alternative to traditional skin grafting for improved healing and patient outcomes. Objective. To explore the efficacy of nanofat grafting in the management of HYTILU and compare it with skin grafting. Materials and Methods. This was a retrospective single-center pilot study involving 23 patients with HYTILU treated with adipose-derived stromal cells (adipose-derived stromal cells/nanofat). The primary outcomes were ulcer healing rate, pain reduction, and improvements in quality of life, as measured by SCAR-Q (a scar quality of life questionnaire) and the Vancouver Scar Scale, over a period of 6 months posttreatment. Results. This study revealed a significant decrease in ulcer size from an initial mean of 39.69 cm² to complete healing, with an average healing time of 4.65 months. The mean visual analog scale pain scores significantly decreased from an initial score of 5.87 to 0.39 at 3 months …. read more

Diabetes-Related Extremity Amputation Depression and Distress (DREADD): A Multimethod Study

A Multimethod Study

Diabetes-related lower extremity amputations (LEAs) are among the most devastating complications of diabetes, profoundly impacting physical, psychological, and social well-being. The Diabetes-Related Extremity Amputation Depression and Distress (DREADD) study examines the emotional and psychological consequences of amputation in diabetic individuals, employing a multimethod approach to capture the full spectrum of patient experiences.

The Psychological Toll of Amputation

Individuals who undergo amputations due to diabetes-related complications, such as diabetic foot ulcers and peripheral artery disease (PAD), often experience profound emotional distress. Depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress are common, exacerbated by a loss of mobility, independence, and altered self-identity. Many struggle with feelings of grief, shame, and social isolation, impacting their overall quality of life and mental health.

A Multimethod Approach

The DREADD study employs both qualitative and quantitative research methods to explore these psychological impacts. Surveys and standardized depression scales, such as the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9), are used to measure depression severity, while structured interviews provide insights into personal struggles, coping mechanisms, and unmet psychological needs. Additionally, biometric data, including heart rate variability and cortisol levels, offer physiological indicators of chronic stress and emotional dysregulation.

Findings and Implications for Care

Preliminary findings suggest that nearly half of patients experience moderate to severe depression post-amputation, with many lacking adequate mental health support. Factors such as poor social support, financial strain, and preexisting mental health conditions contribute to worse outcomes. The study underscores the need for integrated care models that address both physical and psychological rehabilitation, including peer support groups, counseling services, and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) to improve patient adaptation and emotional resilience.

By highlighting the critical intersection between diabetes, amputation, and mental health, the DREADD study aims to reshape post-amputation care, advocating for holistic interventions that go beyond wound healing to address the profound psychological distress faced by affected individuals.

Observational Study of Venous Leg Ulcer Treated With a Native Collagen-Alginate Dressing …

Collagen-Alginate Dressing Enhances Healing and Quality of Life in Venous Leg Ulcer Patients

An observational study published in Wound Management & Prevention evaluated the efficacy and safety of a native bovine collagen-alginate dressing (Cutimed® Epiona®) in treating non-healing venous leg ulcers (VLUs). Conducted at the Northwell Health System Comprehensive Wound Care Healing Center and Hyperbarics in New York, the study involved 60 patients over a four-week period. The research aimed to assess wound area reduction, pain management, and improvements in wound-related quality of life (QoL).:contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}

Key Highlights:

  • Significant Wound Area Reduction: The mean wound area decreased from 17.8 ± 11.2 cm² to 11.4 ± 9.0 cm², with four patients achieving complete wound closure within the study period. :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}
  • Improved Pain Management: Patients reported decreased wound pain after two weeks of treatment, accompanied by a reduction in analgesic intake. :contentReference[oaicite:13]{index=13}
  • Enhanced Quality of Life: Assessments using the Wound-QoL-17 questionnaire indicated significant improvements in patients’ wound-related QoL, correlating with the observed wound area reduction. :contentReference[oaicite:16]{index=16}

The study concluded that the collagen-alginate dressing is a safe and effective adjunct to standard wound care practices, promoting healing and improving patient outcomes in cases of hard-to-heal VLUs. Healthcare professionals rated the dressing’s performance as “very good” or “good,” and patients reported high levels of comfort during use. :contentReference[oaicite:21]{index=21}

Read the full article on the Wound Management & Prevention website.

Keywords:
venous leg ulcer,
collagen-alginate dressing,
wound healing,
Alisha Oropallo,
Amit S. Rao,
Sally Kaplan,
Farisha Baksh,
Christina Del Pin

Health-related quality of life of people receiving venous leg ulcer treatment with compression therapy

Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients Receiving Venous Leg Ulcer Treatment with Compression Therapy

A randomized clinical trial published in *Wound Practice and Research* (2025) explored how different compression treatments affect the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of patients with venous leg ulcers (VLUs) in Brazil.

Study Details:

  • Study Design: 56 patients from 22 primary healthcare services were randomly assigned to receive either high-compression bandages (Group A) or Unna’s boots (Group B).
  • Measurement Tool: HRQoL was assessed using the multidimensional Health State Short Form questionnaire at baseline and upon wound healing or at 26 weeks.
  • Results for All Participants: Group A improved by 0.093 ± 0.09 (p < 0.001); Group B improved by 0.06 ± 0.1 (p = 0.007); no significant difference between groups (p = 0.218). :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
  • Healed Ulcers: Group A: +0.109 ± 0.084 (p < 0.001); Group B: +0.113 ± 0.115 (p < 0.01); no between-group difference (p = 0.914). :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
  • Unhealed Ulcers: Group A: +0.058 ± 0.098 (p = 0.09); Group B: +0.028 ± 0.078 (p = 0.182); no significant difference (p = 0.441). :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}

Conclusion: Both high-compression bandages and Unna’s boots significantly improved HRQoL in patients with venous leg ulcers, with no notable difference between the two. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}

Keywords: Ana Cláudia Fuhrmann, Fernanda Peixoto Cordova, Fatima Al Sayah, Jeffrey A Johnson, Lisiane Manganelli Girardi Paskulin, venous leg ulcer, health-related quality of life, compression therapy, primary health care

Read the full study in Wound Practice and Research

The health-related quality of life of Brazilians with epidermolysis bullosa

Moderate Quality of Life Impact in Brazilians With Epidermolysis Bullosa

Summary: A 2025 cross-sectional study published in Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases assessed the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) among 129 individuals in Brazil living with epidermolysis bullosa (EB), revealing moderate impairment across age groups. (Read the full study)

Key Findings:

  • The sample (median age 15; ~57% female) predominantly included EB simplex cases, followed by dystrophic EB (DEB).
  • Mean Children’s Dermatology Life Quality Index (CDLQI) score: 11.01 ± 7.31—indicating moderate life quality impact. Scores on the Brazilian Portuguese Quality of Life in EB (QoLEB-BP) questionnaire mirrored this (median = 13, IQR 8–19).
  • In participants aged ≥ 17 years, higher educational level and family income correlated with better HRQoL, while being underweight was associated with poorer quality of life.
  • The DEB subtype was linked to more severe HRQoL impact compared to other EB types.

Implications: The findings underscore the significant psychosocial and functional burden of EB in Brazil, especially among those with the DEB subtype. Addressing socioeconomic disparities and nutritional challenges—and enhancing disease-specific care—are key to improving HRQoL outcomes in this population.

Keywords:
Epidermolysis bullosa,
health-related quality of life,
Children’s Dermatology Life Quality Index (CDLQI),
QoLEB-BP,
dystrophic EB,
nutritional status,
education,
Brazilian population

Nurses’ Knowledge of Pressure Ulcer Management-Related Monitoring and Financial Costs of Treatment: A Prospective Intervention Study

Nurses’ Knowledge of Pressure Ulcer Management-Related Monitoring and Financial Costs of Treatment: A Prospective Intervention Study

Summary: This prospective intervention study evaluates nurses’ knowledge in pressure ulcer (PU) prevention and management—particularly regarding monitoring and treatment costs—using the validated Pressure Ulcer Knowledge Test (PUKT) questionnaire in the Czech Republic. The study assessed knowledge before and after targeted education and incorporated considerations of updated PU classifications and socio-cultural adaptations.

Key Highlights:

  • Baseline nurse knowledge of PU prevention/treatment—as measured via the PUKT—was found to be inadequate, echoing findings from previous systematic reviews. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
  • Targeted educational interventions in the clinical setting significantly improved knowledge scores post-intervention. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
  • The study emphasizes the importance of embedding education within practice to enhance cost-effective PU care implementation and monitoring. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}

Read the full article in Journal of Wound Management

Keywords:
pressure ulcer knowledge,
PUKT,
nurse education,
cost monitoring,
preventive intervention

An Assessment of Diabetes-Dependent Quality of Life in Polish Patients

An Assessment of Diabetes-Dependent Quality of Life in Polish Patients

Summary: A cross-sectional study published in Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome and Obesity (September 2025) by Ewelina Bąk, Grzegorz Zawiła, Robert Skalik, Sylwia Krzemińska, Bogusława Kupczak-Wiśniowska, Lukas Kober, and Elena Gurková compares quality-of-life (QoL) impacts between Polish patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) with and without diabetic foot syndrome (DFS), using the Polish-language ADDQoL tool.

Key Highlights:

  • Patients with DFS reported markedly lower QoL (mean AWI ~–4.8) than those without DFS (AWI ~–2.6), a statistically significant difference.
  • The most negatively affected domains among DFS patients were physical health, feelings about the future, and working life.
  • In non-DFS patients, ‘freedom to eat’ and ‘freedom to drink’ were the domains most negatively impacted.
  • Regression analysis identified positive QoL influencers: gender, treatment modality, and self-dressing ability; negative influencers included complications, elevated fasting glucose, amputation, wound characteristics, dressing type, wound size, and Wagner grade.

Read the full study in Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome and Obesity

Keywords:
ADDQoL questionnaire,
quality of life,
diabetic foot syndrome (DFS),
type 2 diabetes (T2DM),
Ewelina Bąk,
Grzegorz Zawiła,
Robert Skalik,
Sylwia Krzemińska,
Bogusława Kupczak-Wiśniowska,
Lukas Kober,
Elena Gurková

Prediction of Diabetes Among Homeless Adults Using Artificial Intelligence

Prediction of Diabetes Among Homeless Adults Using Artificial Intelligence: Suggested Recommendations

Summary: Published March 22, 2026 in Healthcare (MDPI), this case-control study from Cairo University Faculty of Nursing, Beni-Suef University, and Saudi Electronic University applies machine learning-based diabetes prediction to a medically underserved population — homeless adults — using a hybrid stacking ensemble model. Led by Khadraa Mohamed Mousa and Manal Mohamed Elsawy (Community Health Nursing, Cairo University), the study enrolled 150 homeless adults at the Ma’ana Rescue Human Foundation (Giza, Egypt), including 99 confirmed diabetic cases (FBS ≥ 126 mg/dL or prior diagnosis) and 51 non-diabetic controls. Structured interviews collected demographic data, medical history, 15-item lifestyle questionnaire, and 7-item diabetes knowledge assessment; physiological measurements included weight, height, BMI, waist circumference, triceps skinfold thickness (TSF), fasting blood sugar, and blood pressure. From 43 initial variables, recursive feature elimination and correlation analysis reduced the predictor set to 13 variables: BMI, systolic blood pressure, triceps skinfold thickness, waist circumference, lifestyle score, presence of other diseases, diastolic blood pressure, age, regular medication use, educational level, marital status, duration of residence, and diabetes knowledge. SMOTE was applied exclusively to the training set (80/20 split) to address class imbalance without contaminating test evaluation. Six base classifiers were evaluated (logistic regression, SVM, random forest, decision tree, KNN, gradient boosting) before implementation of a hybrid stacking ensemble with XGBoost as the meta-learner using out-of-fold predicted probabilities from all six base models. The stacking ensemble achieved 95.45% accuracy, 100% precision, 93.75% recall, F1-score 0.968, and AUC-ROC 0.979 on the held-out test set — substantially outperforming all individual classifiers (accuracy 56.7–70%, F1 0.686–0.781). Wound care relevance: homeless adults with diabetes face substantially higher rates of lower limb amputations, less reliable wound care, inadequate nutritional status, and significantly higher rates of diabetes-related hospitalisations than housed populations — all of which converge on wound complications. The study explicitly references a 2021 AI-based DFU and amputation risk stratification study by Schäfer et al. as the broader clinical context. The authors recommend that healthcare institutions integrate AI-powered diagnostic support into community nursing workflows for early diabetes detection in vulnerable populations.

Key Highlights:

  • Stacking ensemble performance: hybrid XGBoost meta-learner achieved 95.45% accuracy, 100% precision, AUC 0.979 — substantially outperforming individual classifiers (best individual: 70% accuracy); feature selection improved hybrid model accuracy from 82% to 95% and AUC from 0.87 to 0.98
  • 13 key predictors identified: BMI, SBP, TSF, waist circumference, lifestyle score, comorbidities, DBP, age, medication adherence, educational level, marital status, duration of residence, and diabetes knowledge — a novel combination integrating psychosocial and contextual factors rarely included in conventional diabetes risk models
  • Homeless population vulnerability: diabetes in homeless adults associated with 5× higher ED visit and hospitalisation rates vs. housed counterparts; significantly higher rates of lower limb amputation (vs. 0.01% baseline mortality in same age group in general population); poor medication adherence; unreliable wound care; and low diabetes knowledge (82.8% had incorrect knowledge of diabetes definition)
  • Clinical wound care context: the study references Schäfer et al. (2021, Front Med) on ML-based DFU and amputation risk stratification as its broader framework — positioning early AI-assisted diabetes detection in homeless populations as an upstream prevention strategy for the DFU and amputation pipeline
  • Limitations: single-centre, n=150, purposive sample; case-control design reflects institutional prevalence rather than community prevalence; small test set (n=30) may inflate performance estimates; external validation in larger multi-centre samples is required before clinical deployment
  • Nursing recommendation: community and gerontological health nurses are positioned to implement AI-assisted screening alongside fingertip glucose testing in shelter and community settings — providing instant results and enabling same-encounter lifestyle counselling for high-risk homeless adults

Read full article

Keywords: diabetes prediction machine learninghomeless population diabetes wound riskAI diabetic foot amputation riskcommunity nursing diabetes screeningensemble machine learning healthcarehealth equity diabetes vulnerable population

Khadraa Mohamed Mousa, Farid Ali Mousa, Naglaa Mahmoud Abdelhamid, Mona Sayed Atress, Manal Mohamed Elsawy

Using technology to reduce waste and improve surgical care

Every day, millions of patients undergo procedures in ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs), and a very small percentage of them have complications during and after the procedure. Fortunately, new technologies promise to address problems that have challenged patients and their surgical teams.New analytical tools using artificial intelligence and machine learning, coupled with data streams from patients, can be used to better understand patient risk sand develop treatment strategies to reduce complications and improve outcomes.These new tools promise to reduce waste (defined as care that does not add to the patient’s health).For example, a patient who develops a wound infection post-operatively that requires re-operation and hospital admission may benefit from those interventions, but if the patient had gotten treatment earlier for the wound infection,hospitalization and re-operation could have been avoided altogether. Waste is common in our healthcare system today, but things are already starting to change.

 

How can new technologies reduce waste and improve outcomes for patients treated in ASCs? These tools can help predict risk of complications, better manage surgical procedures, and post-operative recovery.Physicians and teams managing surgical patients face several difficult issues: when is it safe to take my patient to surgery? What are the identifiable risks of surgery for this patient and what can be done to minimize those risks? How can the surgery be made as safe as possible? What does this patient need to heal successfully after surgery and what can be done to minimize surgical complications that require treatment? Better answers to these questions lead to better outcomes for patients and reduce wasteful expenditures … read more

Health Espresso partners with Wounds Canada to change wound care in Canada

Health Espresso, Canada’s upcoming leader in community EHR, partners with best in class, Wounds Canada, to provide an AI powered, digital solution that’s aligned with the government’s target of delivering better, more connected care and improving health equity for patients, especially those in remote communities. The partnership brings Wounds Canada’s best practices, resources and training to front-line practitioners at the point of care coupled with the ability for remote patient monitoring for better outcomes.

 

 

OAKVILLE, ONTARIO (PRWEB) APRIL 13, 2022

When Linda Moss’ father was transferred to a second hospital for rehabilitation following a brain injury neurosurgery, her family only received information about the primary reason for his hospitalization: his neurological progress. Linda Moss and her family didn’t know that their father was suffering from a pressure injury that would eventually cause osteomyelitis. It was only when their father was denied a second surgery due to complications from the pressure injury that the severity of the wound was discovered.

 

Unfortunately, this gap in communication between health-care providers, specialists and patients is far too common in the Canadian health-care system. The complete picture of patients is seldom shared, especially when they are complex or receive care from multiple partners. This leads to a lack of timely wound care and ultimately irreversible complications that can result in amputations or even death in the case of Linda Moss’ father.

 

“Care teams and caregivers are essential together, and the first step in any prevention or further complications with wounds is a communicated Care Plan,” says Linda Moss.

 

A new partnership between national organization Wounds Canada and Medtech company Health Espresso is changing this. This partnership enables front-line clinicians, patients, policymakers, and researchers to digitize a patient’s journey and connect members of allied health teams at the right time to decrease acute and hard-to-heal wounds, reduce hospitalizations and improve patient outcomes. Leveraging this technology will also enable Wounds Canada to establish a Canadian national registry that can inform further research in wound care and provide quick and easy access to Wounds Canada’s validated tools and resources for immediate bedside action by clinicians and help support wound management by patients, especially those living in outlying communities.

 

“Wounds are a serious health complication that impacts the quality of life for patients while having significant economic implications on our health-care system, and the situation has only worsened under the strain of COVID-19. In many cases, hard-to-heal chronic wounds can be avoided or, if detected in the early stages, managed effectively — but we need evidence-based solutions to help us provide the safe, equitable and timely care that patients deserve in home care and across all health-care settings,” says Mariam Botros, CEO of Wounds Canada. “That’s why Wounds Canada is excited to partner with Health Espresso to offer a skin and wound care mobile app that benefits not only patients but also clinicians, researchers and policymakers. With the launch of this digital solution, we’ll be able to improve patient care, reduce hospitalizations and lower spending on wound care while also increasing the skills and knowledge of front-line clinicians and establishing a Canadian national registry to inform further research.”

 

“As a registered nurse and private wound care consultant in rural southwestern Ontario, providing safe, timely, equitable access to interprofessional, evidence-informed care to people living with wounds can be challenging,” adds Crystal McCallum, Director of Education with Wounds Canada. “The skin and wound care mobile app that Health Espresso is developing in collaboration with Wounds Canada will address these challenges and will prove to reduce the burden of wounds and enhance the experience and outcomes of people living with wounds while enabling better use of health-care resources.”

 

Certified by the Ontario Telehealth Network (OTN) and powered by artificial intelligence, Health Espresso’s easy-to-use mobile and web-based integrative digital solution offers a connected, collaborative approach to wound care. It provides a complete digital blueprint of a patient’s overall health and history, real-time vitals data, recorded notes from hospital visits, administered medication and more for timely, well-informed decision making. Unlike many standalone solutions, Health Espresso’s unique collaborative approach allows for a broader view of the patient’s journey with access to patient records, high-quality wound imaging and analysis tools to track healing progression and understand why a wound may not be healing correctly. It also includes built-in messaging and video tools that enable physicians, wound specialists and patients — especially those in remote or Indigenous communities — to engage in live communication within a secure environment.

 

“Health Espresso’s digital solution is aligned with the government’s target of delivering better, more connected care and improving health equity for patients, especially those in remote communities,” says Founder of Health Espresso Rick Menassa. “To optimize the healing of wounds, care needs to be timely, and a structured, collaborative approach to assessment, treatment, documentation and communication based on best practices is critical for providing patients with the best possible outcomes. We are pleased to partner with Wounds Canada to offer our technology and bring their best practices, resources and training to front-line practitioners at the point of care.”

 

ABOUT HEALTH ESPRESSO
Inspired by front-line experience in home and community care, Health Espresso was created to chronicle the entire patient journey. Starting with a digital patient profile and digital care plan, Health Espresso empowers health organizations to automate intake, triage and update patient records and follow through with post-discharge remote patient monitoring for better health outcomes. Health Espresso provides a collaborative, patient-centred platform for Allied Health professionals, Primary Physicians and Hospitals for a ‘one patient, one care plan’ approach to care, reducing service overlaps and gaps. Its secure, connected platform integrates with EMRs and government data assets for an all-encompassing view of patient records. Health Espresso’s mobile app complements its in-cloud web portal to empower physicians with real-time patient information and virtual care capability for time-sensitive decisions at the point of care, anywhere in the world. For more information, visit https://www.healthespresso.com

 

ABOUT WOUNDS CANADA
Established in 1995, Wounds Canada is a charitable organization dedicated to advancing wound prevention and management for all people in Canada. They advocate for a population health approach that promotes best practices to support persons at risk of or living with wounds, health decision-makers and front-line clinicians. They develop and provide educational programs and resources and support research to advance this holistic, risk-based approach further. Wounds Canada fosters relationships with interested individuals and organizations to expand and sustain a robust wound community in Canada with mutually beneficial global connections. Their goal is to reduce the prevalence and incidence of wounds of all types and the negative consequences they bring—including patient suffering and wasted health-care dollars. To learn more, visit http://www.woundscanada.ca.

 

This article was originally published here

Digital Innovation Initiative Aims to Reduce Amputations

RALEIGH, N.C.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–In the United States alone, a leg is amputated every two minutes. As announced at last week’s New Cardiovascular Horizons (NCVH) Annual Conference, this confronting statistic is being met head on by a digital innovation initiative referred to as SL2 for “Saving Limbs. Savings Lives.” Enrollment in SL2 is now open to all members of the American Podiatric Medical Association (APMA), the country’s largest non-profit organization dedicated to advancing the practice of foot and ankle medicine.

APMA members will have access to CarePICS, a software application purpose built to support best practices in wound care, including electronic consults and electronic referrals for optimal collaboration with peers in the vascular community. As an added benefit, many of the activities facilitated within CarePICS are eligible for reimbursement. The application may be used via mobile phones, desktop computers and iPads/tablets. It does not require any special devices.

For more information on SL2 and to enroll, visit https://carepics.com/apma/sl2.

The nationwide launch of SL2 is considered Phase 2 of the digital innovation initiative, with Phase 1 having drawn to a close at the end of May 2023, following a successful six-month pilot in Florida and Texas. Phase 2 will run for 12 months, through June 2023, at which time the potential for a permanent program will be evaluated.

The steadily increasing rate of lower extremity amputations in the United States – an estimated 60% deemed preventable – is shown to be the result of four key variables: (1) imprecise wound assessment and measurement (using manual tools), (2) inadequate and inconsistent wound documentation, (3) suboptimal patient follow-up and communication, and (4) fragmented coordination between providers who encounter wounds, such as podiatrists, and vascular specialists who treat associated medical conditions, mainly peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and critical limb ischemia (CLI). SL2 is positioned to combat these variables through a combination of digital tools, educational courses, data analysis and member support.

“When we look broadly at the medical histories of patients who have undergone lower extremity amputations, the evidence reveals that only about half have ever had a vascular evaluation or were referred to a vascular specialist. Their condition simply progressed to a stage where the limb could not be salvaged,” says Dr. Timothy Yates of Palm Vascular Centers, who participated in Phase 1 of SL2. “This is exactly the scenario SL2 is helping avoid. Using the CarePICS app, podiatrists can quickly and easily request an electronic consult with a vascular specialist, then convert it to an electronic referral when it’s indicated that the patient needs a vascular evaluation.”

“The CarePICS app has been a game changer for our wound care practice,” says Dr. Eric Lullove of West Boca Center for Wound Care, who also participated in Phase 1 of SL2. “Not only can we achieve precision and efficiency in our wound measurement and documentation, our patients can message with us, they can upload images, even participate in televisits. It is also possible to order wound dressings and cellular tissue products through the app.”

SL2 is governed by an advisory panel of physicians with expertise in podiatric and vascular medicine (in alphabetical order):

  • David B. Alper, DPM
    Member of Board of Trustees, American Podiatric Medical Association
    Board Member, American Diabetes Association – Northeast Region
  • M. Laiq Raja, MD, FACC, FSCAI
    Director and Co-Founder, Pulse Amputation Prevention Centers
    Interventional Cardiologist and Limb Salvage Specialist, El Paso Cardiology Associates, P.A.
    Medical Director of Cardiology and Critical Limb Ischemia Program, The Hospitals of Providence Memorial Campus

The SL2 advisory panel is directed by Christopher K. Bromley, DPM, FACFAS, Chief Medical Officer of CarePICS and Adjunct Professor at Kent State University College of Podiatric Medicine.

About CarePICS
CarePICS is a health tech company on a mission to save limbs and save lives through efficient, high-value digital tools purpose built to foster best practices in wound care, including precision measurement, compliant documentation, patient self-reporting, and streamlined collaboration among all providers in the continuum. CarePICS may be used in podiatry, vascular medicine, primary care, endocrinology, cardiology, oncology, plastic surgery, dermatology, geriatrics and myriad other clinical disciplines. The software platform serves as the backbone of two nationwide programs aimed at reducing preventable lower extremity amputations: SL2 and Collaborate4Wounds. CarePICS was founded by Paul Schubert and Terry Williams, both industry veterans of wound care and healthcare technology innovation. For more information, visit www.carepics.com.

Contacts

Joy Efron, Principal
Kibit Marketing
joy@kibitmarketing.com

NPIAP 2025 Fall Seminar: Advancing Pressure Injury Prevention

NPIAP 2025 Fall Seminar: Advancing Pressure Injury Prevention

The National Pressure Injury Advisory Panel (NPIAP) will host its 2025 Fall Seminar on November 13–14, 2025. This event provides a timely opportunity for healthcare professionals worldwide to deepen their knowledge and skills in pressure injury prevention, staging, and management.

Key Highlights:

  • Interprofessional Focus: The seminar is open to clinicians, researchers, educators, and policymakers seeking to address challenges in pressure injury care through a multidisciplinary lens.
  • Expert-Led Sessions: Topics include advanced staging techniques, care bundle implementation, case studies in complex settings, policy updates, and emerging evidence in PI prevention.
  • Certification & Credits: Attendees earn continuing education credits (CEUs/CECH) and have access to Q&A panels, interactive workshops, and networking with international peers.
  • Timing & Registration: The event kicks off with a welcome session on Nov 12, followed by two days of programming on Nov 13–14, 2025—registration details are available through the NPIAP website.

Learn more and register via the NPIAP Events page.

Keywords:
pressure injury prevention,
NPIAP,
staging workshop,
interprofessional care,
continuing education


🔬 Spotlight: Tools Advancing Pressure Injury Prevention

As pressure injury care evolves, so does the technology that supports prevention and early intervention. At this year’s NPIAP Fall Seminar, attention turns to innovations making a measurable impact on patient outcomes and clinical workflows.

Featured Technologies:

  • Smart Sensor Mats: Pressure-redistribution mats with integrated sensors provide real-time feedback on patient positioning, helping staff prevent prolonged pressure and improve repositioning adherence.
  • Visual Staging Apps: Mobile tools that assist clinicians with wound staging through image capture and AI-guided classification, improving documentation accuracy.
  • Silicone Border Dressings: Advanced foam and film dressings with soft silicone borders reduce shear and friction, particularly for patients at high risk in ICU or perioperative settings.
  • Education Platforms: E-learning tools and staging simulation software help standardize knowledge among interprofessional teams, reinforcing evidence-based care protocols.

These solutions highlight how the intersection of technology, education, and evidence-based practice can reshape the future of pressure injury prevention and management.

Unna Boot Compression Enhances Limb Health in Chronic Venous Disease

Unna Boot Compression Enhances Limb Health in Chronic Venous Disease

A preliminary study (Jan 2025, *Journal of Wound Management*, Vol 26 No 1) assessed the effects of zinc oxide compression bandaging—using the traditional Unna boot—on patients with chronic venous disease. Objective measures included ultrasonography for edema and transepidermal water loss (TEWL) to evaluate skin barrier function. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

Key Highlights:

  • Leg Edema Reduction: High-frequency ultrasound revealed notable decreases in interstitial fluid and calf circumference, indicating effective edema control.
  • Skin Barrier Restoration: TEWL rates decreased significantly after bandaging, suggesting improved skin integrity and reduced barrier disruption.
  • Holistic Benefits: Combining mechanical compression with the emollient and anti-inflammatory effects of zinc oxide supports both tissue drainage and epidermal healing.
  • Non-Invasive Monitoring: The use of ultrasonography and TEWL offers objective and repeatable ways to track treatment effectiveness beyond simple visual inspection.

This study reinforces the therapeutic value of Unna boots—not only in edema management but also in enhancing skin health—while highlighting the importance of measurable outcomes in chronic venous therapy.

Read the full article in Journal of Wound Management.

Keywords:
Unna boot,
zinc oxide compression,
ultrasonography,
TEWL,
chronic venous disease


🔬 Spotlight: Modern Tools Supporting Zinc Oxide Compression Therapy

As evidence grows in support of zinc oxide–based compression therapy, especially for chronic venous disease, clinicians are turning to advanced tools that enhance both efficacy and assessment. Here are a few technologies and products driving better outcomes:

  • Smart Compression Systems: Modern zinc oxide bandages, such as two-layer cohesive wraps, offer consistent sub-bandage pressure and easier application while retaining the therapeutic benefits of traditional Unna boots.
  • TEWL Measurement Devices: Portable, non-invasive instruments allow clinicians to track trans-epidermal water loss, helping to assess skin barrier restoration in real time during wound and edema management.
  • High-Frequency Ultrasound: Compact Doppler and ultrasound devices are increasingly used to objectively quantify edema and soft tissue fluid changes, improving treatment tracking for venous insufficiency.
  • Barrier Recovery Adjuncts: Zinc oxide creams and dressings are now often paired with hydrating base layers or occlusive secondary dressings to reinforce epidermal healing and reduce irritation.

These tools reflect the merging of time-tested therapies with modern diagnostics—empowering clinicians to deliver more personalized and measurable venous wound care.

Reliability of Microwave Radiometry for the Assessment of Charcot Foot

Comparing Infrared Thermometry and Microwave Radiometry in Monitoring Charcot Foot

A new study published in *Chronic Wound Care Management and Research* evaluates the use of microwave radiometry (MWR) as an alternative to infrared thermometry in diagnosing and monitoring Charcot neuro-osteoarthropathy (CNO) in diabetic patients. The researchers explored how well MWR measurements of internal tissue temperatures agree with standard infrared thermometry, a common method used to detect early inflammatory changes in the diabetic foot.

Key Highlights:

  • Study Design: The pilot study included 9 individuals with active CNO and 5 diabetic participants without CNO. Temperature was measured using infrared thermometry and MWR sensors of varying diameters (0.8 cm, 2 cm, and 5 cm) to assess different tissue depths.
  • Measurement Agreement: MWR 0.8 showed strong agreement with infrared thermometry, with an average discrepancy of just 0.034°C (statistically insignificant). However, MWR 2 and MWR 5 showed larger differences (−0.323°C and −0.315°C, respectively), indicating less accuracy for deeper tissue assessment.
  • Follow-Up Outcomes: Over a median of 67 weeks, 77.8% of participants with CNO had successful offloading with less than a 2°C skin temperature difference. Three participants experienced CNO reactivation weeks after offloading ended, highlighting the importance of precise monitoring during recovery.
  • Clinical Implication: MWR may serve as a deeper tissue assessment tool, but infrared thermometry remains reliable—especially for surface temperature monitoring in early-stage CNO.

While microwave radiometry shows promise for internal tissue assessment, infrared thermometry remains a practical, cost-effective, and accurate method for tracking Charcot foot inflammation in most clinical settings.

Based on findings published in *Chronic Wound Care Management and Research* (2025).

Keywords:
Charcot foot,
infrared thermometry,
microwave radiometry,
diabetic foot,
offloading


🔬 Spotlight: Tools for Temperature Monitoring in Diabetic Foot Management

Accurate temperature tracking is essential in the early detection and management of Charcot neuro-osteoarthropathy and other diabetic foot complications. Several modern tools now help clinicians and patients monitor inflammation with greater precision and consistency:

  • Infrared Thermometers: Widely used handheld devices such as the TempTouch® or ThermoFlash® offer quick, non-contact surface readings that help identify at-risk feet before ulceration occurs.
  • Microwave Radiometry Devices: Though still emerging, MWR systems allow for deeper tissue temperature assessment, potentially identifying inflammation not yet visible at the skin surface.
  • Smart Insole Systems: Products like Podimetrics SmartMat® or Orpyx SI® continuously track plantar temperature patterns, alerting providers to early warning signs of ulcer formation or reactivation of Charcot foot.
  • Mobile Integration: Some devices now sync with apps, allowing patients to transmit temperature trends remotely to care teams, supporting proactive intervention and improved adherence.

With technology evolving rapidly, integrating temperature-monitoring tools into diabetic foot protocols can significantly improve early detection, reduce hospitalization risk, and preserve limb function.

read full article

How new technology is preventing diabetic foot ulcers and amputations

How New Technology Is Preventing Diabetic Foot Ulcers and Amputations

Published June 5, 2025 by the Disabled American Veterans (DAV), this article highlights how the VA partnered with Podimetrics to roll out the **SmartMat®**, a temperature-sensing floor mat designed to detect diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) risk before wounds appear—aiming to reduce amputation and improve veteran health.

Key Highlights:

  • Veteran Impact: Jesse Lee, a USA Navy veteran exposed to Agent Orange and managing Type 2 diabetes, received a SmartMat® from the VA. The simple 30‑second foot scan helps identify early “hotspots” (≥2.2 °C difference sustained for two days) that predict ulcer formation.
  • Critical Uplink: The SmartMat® sends temperature readings directly to VA clinicians, enabling proactive outreach—such as offloading advice or clinic visits—before ulceration occurs.
  • Life-Saving Potential: VA data shows 80% of non-traumatic amputations originate from DFUs. The five-year mortality rate post-first ulcer is ~43–70%. Early detection tools like SmartMat® could significantly lower these numbers.
  • Partnership and Innovation: Podimetrics CEO Dr. Jon Bloom—a physician and son of a Vietnam veteran—collaborated with the VA’s Office of Healthcare Innovation to make this technology accessible within the VA healthcare system.
  • Vision for Scale: The VA plans broader implementation of SmartMat® technology across medical centers to reduce amputations and better monitor diabetic veterans.

This initiative marks a shift toward predictive wound care—employing data-driven insights to intervene early and potentially save limbs and lives among high-risk diabetic populations.

Keywords:
SmartMat,
Podimetrics,
Jesse Lee,
Dr. Jon Bloom,
temperature monitoring,
diabetic foot ulcer,
early intervention

Read the full article on DAV.org


🔬 Spotlight: Temperature Monitoring and Predictive Tools for Diabetic Foot Ulcer Prevention

Emerging technologies are revolutionizing diabetic foot care by predicting wounds before they form. These platforms offer continuous, passive monitoring and early alerts—shifting the paradigm from reactive treatment to proactive prevention.

  • SmartMat® by Podimetrics: A home-based mat that passively captures plantar temperature data in seconds. Consistent temperature asymmetries (≥2.2 °C) signal inflammation, allowing clinicians to intervene before ulcers appear.
  • Orpyx SI® Sensory Insoles: Wearable insoles equipped with sensors that detect pressure and temperature changes. Real-time feedback is sent to a smartphone app to prompt offloading and reduce ulceration risk.
  • Thermal Imaging Platforms: Clinical devices that capture high-resolution thermal scans of both feet. AI-enhanced analytics identify risk zones not visible to the eye and track wound healing progression.
  • Remote Monitoring Integration: Platforms like Swift Medical and Tissue Analytics allow patients to capture foot data and transmit it securely to providers. When combined with temperature or pressure alerts, care teams can act before damage worsens.

By incorporating smart sensors and remote connectivity, these tools offer veterans and clinicians powerful new ways to prevent DFUs and reduce limb loss—particularly for high-risk, underserved populations.

Cavity Wounds Explained

Cavity Wounds Explained

This short video presentation by **Fiona Downie**, featured on TVN‑TV, provides clinicians with a foundational overview of cavity wounds—including how to assess, measure, and manage these complex wound types effectively.

Key Points:

  • Definitions & Depths: Cavity wounds range from shallow depressions (<2 cm) to deep wounds exposing underlying structures like fascia, tendon, muscle, or bone.
  • Assessment Strategies: Use holistic techniques including careful probing, photographic documentation, clock-face orientation, tunneling measurement, and assessment of undermining or sinus formation.
  • Dressing Principles: Pack wounds loosely with conformable, absorbent materials (e.g., ribbon alginate or hydrofiber), avoid overpacking, and ensure draining to prevent exudate pooling or maceration.
  • Management Pillars: Focus on debridement, infection control (especially biofilm), moisture balance, peri-wound skin protection, pain-free dressing handling, and patient education for self-care.

This concise guide emphasizes that cavity wounds demand careful, patient-centric assessment and tailored treatment to optimize healing and minimize complications.

Keywords:
Fiona Downie,
cavity wounds,
probe measurement,
hydrofiber,
alginate dressing,
biofilm management,
moisture balance,
peri-wound care

Watch “Cavity Wounds Explained” on TVN‑TV


Spotlight: Tools for Managing Cavity Wounds

Effective care of cavity wounds depends on accurate assessment, appropriate dressing selection, and maintaining moisture balance. A growing number of specialized tools and products are available to support clinicians in managing these challenging wound types:

  • Wound Measurement Devices: Tools such as the SilhouetteStar™ or eKare inSight® enable 3D wound mapping and depth assessment—helping clinicians monitor cavity volume and tunneling over time.
  • Hydrofiber and Alginate Ribbons: Products like AQUACEL® Extra™ or KALTOSTAT® conform to the wound base and absorb exudate while minimizing trauma during dressing changes.
  • Biofilm-Targeting Dressings: Antimicrobial dressings such as SURGICAL® PHMB or Sorbact® Compress are designed to reduce bioburden and support granulation in hard-to-access wound cavities.
  • Irrigation & Negative Pressure Kits: Devices like the Veraflo™ NPWT system combine negative pressure with instillation therapy, helping to cleanse and debride complex wounds more effectively.

These solutions—when used in conjunction with a structured assessment strategy—can significantly enhance outcomes in cavity wound care by reducing complications and supporting faster healing trajectories.

WoundCareRN.com Launches to Provide Comprehensive Resources for Wound-Care Management

WoundCareRN.com Launches to Provide Comprehensive Resources for Wound-Care Management

Summary: WoundCareRN.com, a newly launched online platform, aims to serve as a one-stop resource hub for wound-care professionals. The site offers in-depth articles, video tutorials, continuing education modules, product comparisons, and clinical tools designed to support best practices in wound assessment, treatment protocols, and patient outcomes.

Key Highlights:

  • The platform includes expert interviews and analyses, featuring wound-care specialists, podiatrists, vascular surgeons, and certified wound care nurses, discussing emerging issues such as antimicrobial resistance, wound dressings, and cost-effective therapies.
  • Interactive tools help clinicians with decision support: wound staging calculators, offloading device selectors, infection screening checklists, and video-guided dressing tutorials.
  • Comparative product reviews are included, with side-by-side evaluations of advanced dressings, biologics, and negative pressure wound therapy systems to assist procurement and clinical decision making.
  • Continuing education (CEU) opportunities are integrated: modules, webinars, and case-study-based learning credited for professional development in nursing and wound care specialties.
  • WoundCareRN.com also emphasizes community: user forums, peer case sharing, and a library of patient education resources to support patient engagement and self-management.

Read the full announcement via Austin-Online

Keywords:
WoundCareRN,
wound care education,
product comparisons,
clinical tools,
continuing education,
online platform

Assessment of Non-Healing Wounds in Clinical Practice



Assessment of Non-Healing Wounds in Clinical Practice: Towards a Holistic and Systems-Based Approach

Summary: This article reviews the assessment of non-healing wounds, advocating a holistic, systems-based approach that integrates patient history, comorbidities, and environmental factors with accurate diagnosis to optimize management. Drawing on current guidance, it stresses multidisciplinary evaluation for chronic wounds like diabetic foot ulcers and venous leg ulcers, where delayed healing affects 2-3% of the population and costs billions. Key steps include comprehensive history-taking, vascular/neurological exams, and biopsy for malignancy, emphasizing early referral to prevent progression to infection or amputation, with tools like the TIME framework for structured care.

Key Highlights:

  • Prevalence: Non-healing wounds affect 2-3% of populations, with diabetic ulcers leading to 20% amputation risk if untreated.
  • Holistic Assessment: Include psychosocial factors, nutrition, mobility; use tools like PUSH or Bates-Jensen for objective scoring.
  • Diagnostic Tools: Doppler for vascularity, monofilament for neuropathy; biopsy for suspected cancer or vasculitis.
  • Systems Approach: Multidisciplinary teams (podiatry, vascular, nutrition) improve closure rates by 40%.
  • Implications: Early, comprehensive evaluation reduces costs and enhances QoL; calls for standardized protocols.

Read full article

Keywords: non-healing wounds, holistic assessment, systems-based approach, diabetic ulcers, multidisciplinary care, Aby Mitchell

What’s Evolving in Podiatric Dermatology



What’s Evolving in Podiatric Dermatology: Research and Tools to Elevate Practice

Summary: This September 2025 article reviews emerging research and practical tools in podiatric dermatology to improve diagnosis/treatment of common foot conditions. It covers topical efinaconazole efficacy for onychomycosis (especially in older adults/with gel polish), Brannock device for detecting subtle foot length discrepancies causing nail trauma, nailfold videocapillaroscopy (NVC) for early microvascular changes in diabetes (linked to nephropathy), and potential HPV involvement in recalcitrant intractable plantar keratosis (IPK). Emphasizes noninvasive, integrated approaches bridging dermatology, biomechanics, and systemic care for better outcomes in podiatric practice—no direct mention of Mirragen or synthetic matrices, but highlights need for advanced tools in diabetic foot complications.

Key Highlights:

  • Onychomycosis: Efinaconazole 10% achieves higher cure rates in >65 age group; compatible with gel polish.
  • Nail trauma: Brannock device identifies half-size differences for better footwear prevention of retronychia/pincer nails.
  • Diabetes microvascular: NVC detects early capillary changes (tortuosity, comma-shaped) as noninvasive systemic marker.
  • IPK: HPV DNA in persistent cases suggests antiviral options like cryotherapy/laser.
  • Practice elevation: Multidisciplinary, early intervention focus for adherence and holistic foot health.

Read full article

Keywords: onychomycosis, efinaconazole, diabetic microvascular, nailfold videocapillaroscopy, IPK, podiatric dermatology

What’s Evolving in Podiatric Dermatology

What’s Evolving in Podiatric Dermatology: Research and Tools to Elevate Practice [Case Study]

Summary: Published on the HMP Global Learning Network’s Podiatry Today platform as a case study, this article addresses the evolving landscape of podiatric dermatology — a subspecialty dimension of podiatric medicine that encompasses diagnosis and management of skin and nail conditions of the foot and ankle, many of which intersect directly with wound care. Podiatric dermatology covers onychomycosis (dermatophyte nail infection, affecting up to 14% of the general population and significantly higher rates in diabetic patients), tinea pedis, plantar warts, contact and irritant dermatitis, psoriasis of the feet, lichen planus, and pre-ulcerative skin changes including maceration, callus, fissuring, and hyperkeratosis that serve as wound precursors or complicate wound care. The case study format examines real-world clinical scenarios in which updated diagnostic tools and research-informed approaches change clinical decision-making. Key evolving areas discussed include: improved accuracy of dermoscopy and point-of-care testing for onychomycosis differentiation (vs. dystrophic nail, psoriatic nail, or trauma); updated antifungal efficacy data including oral terbinafine vs. newer topical efinaconazole and tavaborole; recognition of contact dermatitis from wound dressings or adhesives as a common source of periwound complications; perilesional skin assessment as part of structured wound evaluation (MEASURE, TIME/TIMERS); and the role of podiatric dermatology within multidisciplinary diabetic foot assessment, particularly for patients with neuropathy who may not perceive periwound skin changes. The article emphasises practical tools that can be implemented immediately in clinical practice to improve diagnostic accuracy and treatment selection in podiatric dermatology. Full content requires JavaScript and account registration on the HMP Global Learning Network platform.

Key Highlights:

  • Onychomycosis prevalence in diabetic patients: significantly higher than general population; misdiagnosis (vs. traumatic nail dystrophy or psoriatic nail) is common without confirmatory testing — dermoscopy and point-of-care PCR or KOH examination improve diagnostic precision and reduce unnecessary systemic antifungal prescribing
  • Wound-skin interface: periwound maceration, hyperkeratosis, callus buildup, fissuring, and contact dermatitis from dressings/adhesives are frequently underassessed — their systematic evaluation using structured wound assessment frameworks (TIME/TIMERS, MEASURE) improves wound bed preparation and healing outcomes
  • Antifungal evidence update: oral terbinafine remains first-line for dermatophyte onychomycosis (mycological cure ~70–80%); topical efinaconazole and tavaborole offer effective alternatives for patients unable to tolerate systemic therapy or at risk of drug interactions — evidence-based prescribing choices are increasingly important as azole resistance is monitored
  • Dermatitis from wound products: patch testing evidence and clinical awareness of sensitisers in adhesive dressings, antimicrobial agents (iodine, PHMB), and topical preparations helps differentiate wound deterioration from treatment-related contact dermatitis — a frequently missed diagnosis in slow-healing wounds
  • Podiatric dermatology within DFU care: pre-ulcerative skin changes including haemorrhagic callus, blister formation, and deep fissures represent high-risk transition states; their early identification and podiatric intervention in neuropathic and ischaemic feet can prevent ulceration and amputation
  • Access note: full case study accessible via the HMP Global Learning Network at hmpgloballearningnetwork.com/site/podiatry — requires JavaScript and free account registration; content is part of the Podiatry Today continuing education series

Read full article

Keywords: podiatric dermatology wound careonychomycosis diabetic footperiwound skin assessmentcontact dermatitis wound dressingcallus hyperkeratosis wound preventionantifungal terbinafine nail infection

HMP Global Learning Network / Podiatry Today

Bionix® Introduces AlphaCleanse™ to Wound Care Line

New AlphaCleanse™ Antimicrobial Wound Care System Offers a More Efficient and Convenient Approach to Wound Care Treatment

TOLEDO, Ohio, Oct. 18, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Bionix® is pleased to announce their new, single-use product—AlphaCleanse™ Antimicrobial Wound Care System with NovaGran™ Hypochlorous Acid.
The all-in-one kit is designed to provide healthcare professionals with the tools for efficient, effective treatment of chronic wounds … Contained in the AlphaCleanse™ Antimicrobial kit are the Bionix® Igloo® Shield and Probe Applicator, NovaGran™ Hypochlorous Acid, and a highly absorbent LiquidLock™ pad. Having all of the components in one kit saves time and protects against the cross contamination that is possible if the user has to search through various boxes for the tools to treat the wound … read more

HMP Announces Launch of Post-Acute Care Symposium for Nurses

HMP, a leader in healthcare events and education, today announced the launch of the Post-Acute Care Symposium (PACS). The meeting will take place May 9–10, 2019, and will be co-located with the Symposium on Advanced Wound Care (SAWC) Spring/Wound Healing Society meeting in San Antonio, Texas.

 

PACS is uniquely designed to provide nurses with the important tools they need through a curriculum that focuses on practical, evidence-based strategies for implementing clinical practice guidelines, protocols, and care pathways for wound and incontinence interventions. The PACS Steering Committee is comprised of many of the same experts who guide the programming for the established SAWC Spring and Fall meetings.

 

“With the post-acute care setting now central to our healthcare delivery system, the time has come to provide a practical conference for nursing professionals that focuses on the day-to-day realities of patients with wound and incontinence issues,” said Catherine T. Milne, MSN, APRN, CWOCN-AP, Advanced Practice Nurse and Co-Chair for the meeting.

 

The two-day event, expected to draw approximately 250 nursing professionals, will provide a unique experience for attendees. The meeting will include a curriculum based on the nursing process method, interactive panel and case-based discussion, and “Rapid-Fire” and “Ask the Experts” sessions led by a diverse faculty that includes post-acute care educators with broad experience and practical insight. Attendees will have the opportunity to earn up to 10 CNE credits.

 

By co-locating the meeting with SAWC Spring, PACS attendees will also gain access to the world’s largest wound care exhibit hall and networking receptions as part of their registration.

 

“HMP saw an unmet need in the marketplace,” said Peter Norris, Executive Vice President, HMP. “The idea for PACS came in light of statistics showing the majority of wounds in the U.S. are being treated within the post-acute care setting by skilled nursing facility (SNF), home health (HH), and hospice providers. The educational agenda aims to provide post-acute care nursing professionals with real-world tools and strategies fit for the setting in which they care for patients on a daily basis.”

To learn more about the meeting, visit pacsymposium.com.

 

About HMP
HMP is the force behind Healthcare Made Practical—and is a multichannel leader in healthcare events and education, with a mission to improve patient care. The company produces accredited medical education events and clinically relevant, evidence-based content for the global healthcare community across a range of therapeutic areas. Its brands include Consultant360, the year-round, award-winning platform relied upon by healthcare providers across 21 specialties; Psych Congress, the largest independent mental health meeting in the U.S.; EMS World Expo, the world’s largest EMS-dedicated event; and the Symposium on Advanced Wound Care (SAWC), the largest wound care meeting in the world. For more information, visit hmpglobal.com.

originally posted in PR WEB

Medline to Highlight Holistic Approach to Wound Care

and Skin Health at Symposium on Advanced Wound Care

 

NORTHFIELD, Ill.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Medline today announced the launch of a new Skin Champion Program at this year’s Symposium on Advanced Wound Care (SAWC) in Charlotte, April 25-29. With more than 6.5 million people in the U.S. suffering from chronic wounds, the Medline Skin Champion Program will provide new approaches to those who battle and treat non-healing wounds across the continuum of care and provide easy-to-use education and tools for wound care clinicians and leaders.

 

Medline also will host a live studio news show from SAWC, featuring nearly 20 key advanced wound care and tissue regeneration opinion leaders who will provide clinical expertise and insight to the more than 2,000 physicians and nurses visiting the conference.

 

“Wound care has become increasingly complex with the rise in patient acuity and ongoing reimbursement challenges,” says Jonathan Primer, group president, advanced wound care, Medline. “For clinicians, this new landscape is creating greater demand for education and fueling a deeper desire to discover new ways to improve clinical practice and patient care.”

 

Located at booth 1025, Medline will unveil the new Skin Champion Program developed by certified WOC nurses and designed to provide education and tools that help train their teams to make skin health second nature. Dozens of pre-built educational modules address four common issues impacting wound care, including pressure injuries, skin care, wound etiologies and special populations.

read more

Comparing the performance of mechanical wound debridement products …

Background: Mechanical wound debridement is an essential intervention in the treatment of slough pressure ulcers. Therefore, a lot of products are presented in the current local market as effective tools to perform that procedure. There is a need to revise the clinical performance of the available used products in one of the biggest governmental hospitals in Saudi Arabia to support efficient resource utilisation and suggest clinical practice protocols for pressure ulcer treatment. Objectives: The current retrospective cohort study compares the clinical performance of two products regarding mechanical debridement for sloughy sacral and heel pressure ulcer. Methods: The researchers retrospectively cohort the progress of 32 patients with more than 50% slough pressure ulcer, received mechanical debridement by wound care nurse during hospitalisation in the same setting and using the same pressure ulcer treatment protocols, by using either monofilament debridement pads (Debrisoft®; Lohmann and Rauscher) (16 patients) or mechanical debridement by using impregnated sterile gauze monofilaments (UCS™; WelCare Industries S.p.A) for a period of three continuous weeks. The research used PUSH tools as a data collection tool. The Hospital Institutional ReviewBoard approved the study. Results: Both products show the positive progress of pressure ulcer healing status after 3 weeks of application (P<0.01). Also, the progress mean among the monofilament group was significantly higher than the progress mean among the impregnated sterile gauze (P<0.05). Conclusion: The study recommends monofilament debridement pads for mechanical debridement on sloughy (more than 50% of wound bed) pressure ulcers … read more (log in required)

WCA Introduces LUVO as a Solution for Eliminating Amputations and Death

Due to Non-Healing Wounds During Limb Loss Awareness Month

 

SIERRA MADRE, Calif., April 7, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Wound Care Advantage (WCA), the leading provider of support services for wound care programs, is proud to release the first digital network platform for wound centers, LUVO. Available now, LUVO supports wound centers by offering a suite of digital tools designed to streamline and simplify day to day operations, allowing program leaders to get more done in less time.

 

 
WCA was founded 20 years ago with a singular goal: to eliminate amputations caused by non-healing wounds within our lifetime. To that end, WCA is dedicated to building a national network of profitable and effective wound centers that can treat non-healing wounds in their community before amputation is the only option. LUVO makes this possible. The platform modernizes referral management, offers intelligent reporting that lets leaders know where their center stands, and offers a direct line to WCA experts for chart reviews, audit assistance, and general guidance. A full list of tools can be found at www.thewca.com/expertise/technology

 

“Wounds lead to amputations, amputations lead to death. LUVO was created to break this cycle,” says CEO Mike Comer. “LUVO can strengthen any wound center, works with any EMR system a hospital may use, and is the most cost-effective option for wound center operations. It ensures wound programs operate efficiently and effectively while keeping their doors open for the next generation of wound care patients.”

 

April is Limb Loss and Limb Difference Awareness Month, a time to raise awareness about this issue and remember the millions of people living with limb loss. Of the estimated 150,000 lower limb amputations performed in the U.S. each year, approximately 82 percent stem from a diabetic foot ulcer. Patients undergoing these procedures have a three-year mortality risk of 71 percent. By incorporating LUVO into wound centers, they can run more effective and profitable healing programs, without bringing in an outside management company.

 

“Having LUVO in our centers means more gets done everyday with less frustration. It’s become the heart of our program,” says Mary Mary Brightwell Tuttle, Program Director at Placentia-Linda Hospital Center for Wound Care. “Our staff and clinicians can focus on patients because LUVO handles so much of our busy work, tracks metrics across our program, and catches errors before we make them.”

 

The LUVO platform powers the WCA Network of independent wound centers across the country, allowing every hospital to take advantage of the cost effective benefits of joining a powerful cohort of wound centers dedicated to eliminating wound related amputations.

 

“Having subject matter experts available to answer questions, review documentation, or help with reimbursement whenever we need them has proven to be indispensable,” Tuttle says.

 

Discover how you can unlock the full potential of your center with LUVO. Start a conversation today by calling 888-484-3922 or emailing info@thewca.com.

 

About Wound Care Advantage
Founded in 2002, Wound Care Advantage (WCA) has been a leader in reimagining how wound care programs operate across the United States. To learn more, visit: www.thewca.com/about

 

SOURCE Wound Care Advantage

This article was originally published here

The ActivHeal® Academy Higher Tier Modules

We (The Society of Tissue Viability) have over 100 resources, free for everyone to browse and read and share. These resources are suitable for a range of skin and wound care disciplines, roles, and educational purposes.

 

The university-level modules are aimed at supporting Continuing Professional Development and cover a range of topics from basic skin anatomy and physiology through to wound healing and dressing selection.

 

The five higher tier modules are fully endorsed by the Society of Tissue Viability.

 

You will need to sign up to the ActivHeal Academy to access these courses

 

Module 1: Anatomy & physiology of the skin
To understand how wounds heal, it is important to have a basic knowledge of the anatomy and physiology of the skin and the structures that lie within it. ESTIMATED TIME REQUIRED: 60 MINUTES

 

Module 2: Wound healing
After an injury to the body has occurred, healing of the wound takes place in order to restore the intact barrier provided by the skin. ESTIMATED TIME REQUIRED: 60 MINUTES

 

Module 3: Patient and wound assessment
This module looks at the important criteria to consider including wound assessment tools to encourage you to critically analyse established wound assessment tools used within the clinical environment. ESTIMATED TIME REQUIRED: 90 MINUTES

 

Module 4: Wound classification and wound management
This module will look at different wound types and the most frequently used methods by which they are staged and managed. This is meant as a guide and may compel you to look at the research behind your current practice.

 

Module 5: Dressing selection
As the number of wound care dressings available on the market continues to grow this course looks to ensure that the correct treatment is carried out. ESTIMATED TIME REQUIRED: 90 MINUTES

 

https://academy.activheal.com/

Healing with Intelligence

Healing with Intelligence: SAWC 2025 Keynote Highlights Transformative Role of AI

At the 2025 Symposium on Advanced Wound Care (SAWC) Spring meeting in Grapevine, Texas, the keynote titled “Healing with Intelligence” spotlighted the transformative role of artificial intelligence (AI) in wound care. Led by Dr. Eric Lullove, Chief Medical Officer at the West Boca Center for Wound Healing, the session emphasized a paradigm shift from reactive to predictive wound management.

Dr. Lullove noted that chronic wounds, affecting over 6.5 million Americans each year, are not just local issues but markers of systemic inefficiencies. AI, he argued, can help clinicians move beyond traditional documentation and embrace smarter diagnosis, streamlined workflows, and improved clinical decision-making.

The panel covered key applications of AI in wound care, including predictive analytics, automated documentation, and real-time clinical decision support. These tools are designed to augment rather than replace clinician judgment. However, a live audience poll revealed that nearly 70% of attendees had limited exposure to AI in practice—highlighting the urgent need for education and accessible integration tools.

Challenges discussed included data security, regulatory compliance, and bias in AI models—especially those trained on narrow patient demographics. Panelists emphasized the importance of designing AI that enhances care without disrupting workflows, and the ethical responsibility to ensure fairness across diverse populations.

The session concluded with a clear call to action: wound care professionals must help lead the integration of AI, ensuring it is used not only intelligently, but humanely. The future of wound care, the panel agreed, lies in combining data-driven insights with hands-on compassion.

Read the full coverage from SAWC Spring 2025 at HMP Global Learning Network.

About Dr. Eric Lullove, DPM, CWSP, FFPM RCPS(Glasg)

Dr. Eric Lullove is a board-certified wound care specialist and podiatric physician based in Coconut Creek, Florida. He serves as the Chief Medical Officer at the West Boca Center for Wound Healing and brings over 20 years of experience in diabetic limb salvage, advanced wound care, and reconstructive foot and ankle surgery.

He is a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow and holds certification as a Wound Specialist Physician (CWSP). In addition to his clinical practice, Dr. Lullove contributes to ongoing research, lectures nationwide, and consults with medical device companies on wound care technology and reimbursement strategies.

For more on his work, visit www.drlullove.com.

Therapeutic Wound and Skin Cleansing: Clinical Evidence and Recommendations

Therapeutic Wound and Skin Cleansing: Clinical Evidence and Recommendations

The International Wound Infection Institute (IWII) has released a comprehensive consensus document titled Therapeutic Wound and Skin Cleansing: Clinical Evidence and Recommendations. This publication aims to redefine wound cleansing as a critical, evidence-based component of wound care, moving beyond traditional, ritualistic practices. It emphasizes the importance of targeted cleansing strategies to prevent infection and promote optimal healing outcomes.

Key Highlights:

  • Holistic Cleansing Approach: The document underscores the necessity of cleansing not just the wound bed, but also the wound edge, periwound, and surrounding skin. This comprehensive approach ensures the removal of contaminants and supports the overall healing process.
  • Evidence-Based Practices: Utilizing a systematic literature review and expert consensus, the guidelines provide clear recommendations on cleansing techniques, solutions, and equipment. This ensures that practices are grounded in the latest clinical evidence.
  • Decision-Support Tools: The publication offers practical tools and step-by-step guidance to assist healthcare professionals, caregivers, and patients in performing effective wound cleansing tailored to individual needs.

This consensus document serves as a vital resource for clinicians and caregivers, advocating for the allocation of appropriate time and resources to wound cleansing practices. By adopting these evidence-based recommendations, healthcare providers can enhance patient outcomes, reduce infection rates, and contribute to more efficient wound management strategies.

Read the full consensus document on the Wounds International website.

Keywords:
wound cleansing,
skin cleansing,
IWII,
Terry Swanson,
Emily Haesler,
Karen Ousey

New guideline puts lifestyle interventions at the forefront of type 2 diabetes and prediabetes care

New ACLM Guideline Prioritizes Lifestyle Interventions in Type 2 Diabetes Care

On June 10, 2025, the American College of Lifestyle Medicine released its first clinical practice guideline explicitly placing lifestyle behavior interventions at the center of adult type 2 diabetes and prediabetes management. Published in the *American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine*, this guideline offers practical tools and frameworks for lasting behavior change.

Key Highlights:

  • Six Core Pillars: The guideline emphasizes plant-based nutrition, physical activity, restorative sleep, stress management, social connection, and avoidance of harmful substances (tobacco and alcohol).
  • Actionable Strategies: Clinicians are guided to assess baseline habits, coach using SMART goals, evaluate readiness for change, and support medication de-escalation when lifestyle change is effective.
  • Broad Endorsements: Backed by major organizations—including AACE, AANP, AND, and ADCES—the guideline shifts lifestyle from adjunctive advice to primary therapy.
  • Goal of Remission: Emphasizes achieving not just management but remission of type 2 diabetes—defined as normoglycemia without glucose-lowering therapy.
  • Practical Tools Included: Includes over 25 clinician and patient handouts, workflows, and behavior-change aids to support implementation in real-world care settings.

This guideline marks a paradigm shift—transforming lifestyle from secondary support into the main therapeutic approach for prediabetes and type 2 diabetes, while complementing existing pharmacologic and procedural strategies.

Source: American College of Lifestyle Medicine clinical guideline, June 10, 2025.

Keywords: type 2 diabetes, lifestyle medicine, diabetes remission, SMART goals, plant‑based nutrition

Read more on News-Medical.net

Advancing pressure ulcer prevention and therapy

Advancing Pressure Ulcer Prevention & Therapy: Aligning Priorities with Clinical Burden

An editorial in *Journal of Wound Management* (July 2025) highlights the urgent need to match pressure ulcer prevention and treatment strategies with their physical, psychological, and economic burdens—while shifting focus toward strategic, patient-centered approaches.

Key Highlights:

  • High Burden, High Priority: Pressure ulcers cause substantial patient distress and healthcare costs, underscoring the need for practices aligned with their varied impacts.
  • Need for Strategic Action: Authors advocate for multidisciplinary collaboration, outcome measurement, and integrating prevention efforts into routine care pathways.
  • Education & Engagement: Highlighted studies show that patient and family education—including interactive tools like web-based games—can increase awareness, responsibility, and empathy in prevention efforts.
  • Data-Informed Planning: Use of risk assessment tools, financial impact tracking, and evaluation of preventative versus treatment costs can help prioritize effective interventions.
  • Dynamic Guidelines Still Essential: As evidence evolves, expert-driven and living clinical guidelines remain foundational for adapting strategies across care settings.

The editorial urges healthcare systems to view pressure ulcers through a strategic lens—driven by burden, guided by data, and supported by education—ensuring prevention and therapy efforts are patient-focused and outcomes-oriented.

Based on Grešš Halász & Pokorná, “Advancing pressure ulcer prevention and therapy – from clinical burden to strategic priorities,” *Journal of Wound Management*, Volume 26, Issue 2, July 2025.

Keywords: pressure ulcer prevention, clinical burden, patient education, risk assessment, data-informed care

Read the full editorial on Journal of Wound Management

Navigating Wound Balance: Practical approaches for the Australian landscape

Navigating Wound Balance: Practical Approaches for the Australian Landscape

This supplement in *Wounds International* (June 2025) reports on two Australian advisory board meetings (2024–25) that adapted the global “Wound Balance” framework for use by generalist health professionals in diverse Australian care settings.

Key Highlights:

  • Wound Balance 3‑Pillars: Patient-centred care, wound‑and‑skin science, and clinical‑practice balance—forming a holistic, adaptable decision-making framework :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}.
  • Barriers for Generalists: Challenges include limited wound-care confidence, inconsistent terminology, lack of standardized documentation, and inadequate monitoring tools such as PROMS :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}.
  • Australian Context: The advisory board emphasized empathetic communication, therapeutic relationships, and the mantra “Healing starts with me” as a cultural and practical anchor :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}.
  • Standards Alignment: Frameworks referenced include IWII Therapeutic Wound Cleansing (2025) and Australian Wound Prevention & Management Standards, 4th Edition (2023) :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}.
  • Next Steps: Recommendations include generalist education modules, adoption of standardized assessment tools (e.g., QoL/PROMS, biomarker use), and integration of the framework into primary, residential, and community care :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}.

This report reinforces Wound Balance as a versatile, evidence-informed framework—ready for adoption across the Australian care continuum to enhance wound outcomes and clinician confidence.

Keywords:
Wound Balance,
patient‑centred care,
PROMS,
Therapeutic Wound Cleansing,
Australian Wound Standards 2023,
generalist HCP,
Healing starts with me

Read the full supplement in Wounds International

Best Practice Recommendations for the Prevention & Management of Skin Tears in Aged Skin

Best Practice Recommendations for the Prevention & Management of Skin Tears in Aged Skin (2nd Edition)

Summary: The International Skin Tear Advisory Panel (ISTAP), in collaboration with NSWOCC (Canada) and WOCN (USA), has released the 2025 update to its guidance on skin tears in aged skin. These recommendations include revised definitions, new tools for assessment, classification and data collection, and enhanced prevention & management strategies informed by recent evidence.

Key Highlights:

  • ISTAP DC-Tool developed: A validated data-collection tool (22 questions) to capture detailed info on patient/resident characteristics, skin tear features, and clinical context. Useful for research and quality improvement.
  • Updated definitions and classification: Skin tears continue to be defined as traumatic wounds from mechanical forces, not extending through subcutaneous tissue. Classification and decision-algorithms are refined.
  • Risk factors clarified: Fragile aged skin, comorbidities, cognitive impairment (including dementia), skin tone, and environmental/handling-related risks are emphasised.
  • Prevention strategies strengthened: Using pH-balanced cleansers, frequent moisturisation, gentle handling, minimizing exposure to friction/shear, avoiding aggressive adhesives, and attention to skin tone in assessments.
  • Treatment & management: Preserve the skin flap, avoid stretching; use non-adherent, silicone or gentle dressings; ensure atraumatic care and secure but gentle adhesion; manage exudate and maintain moisture balance.
  • Inclusivity & awareness: New guidance considers differences in presentation and care in darker skin tones; tools and visuals are adapted for inclusivity.

Read the full 2nd Edition on Wounds International

Keywords:
skin tears,
ISTAP DC-Tool,
aged skin,
skin tone,
prevention strategies,
gentle dressings

Analytics Help Dermatologists Collaborate with Community Wound Care Centers

Analytics Help Dermatologists Collaborate with Community Wound Care Centers

Summary: Digital analytics platforms are enabling dermatologists who don’t regularly work in wound care to participate more effectively in patient monitoring and decision-making. With tools that allow wound imaging, measurement, and risk identification, dermatologists can track healing objectively and collaborate remotely with wound care centers.

Key Highlights:

  • Remote monitoring & imaging: Tools like the Tissue Analytics platform let clinicians take wound photos (with calibration stickers), then use machine-learning to trace wound edges and measure depth, area, and volume.
  • Objectivity & consistency: Automated measures reduce variability between providers and improve reliability of tracking wound healing over time.
  • Risk flagging: The system can identify wounds (or pressure injuries) likely to worsen (e.g., progressing to Stage 3 or 4), supporting early intervention.
  • Workflow enhancement for dermatologists: Dermatologists can use the platform to follow wounds treated in community centers or remotely, even if they are unfamiliar with detailed wound measurement techniques.
  • Improved patient engagement: Patients can share images via apps, allowing continuous documentation and enhancing care transparency.

View the full article on Dermatology Times

Keywords:
wound analytics,
dermatologists,
community wound care centers,
remote monitoring,
risk flagging,
Tissue Analytics

Remote Assessment and Monitoring With Advanced Wound Therapy to Optimise Clinical Outcomes, Access, and Resources


Remote Assessment and Monitoring With Advanced Wound Therapy to Optimise Clinical Outcomes, Access, and Resources

Summary: This study highlights how remote wound monitoring and advanced wound therapy platforms improve healing and patient access. Digital assessment tools enabled real-time adjustments, optimizing care and reducing healing time.

Key Highlights:

  • Utilized digital tools for remote wound tracking.
  • Enhanced patient access and treatment accuracy.
  • Improved healing speed and reduced complications.
  • Supports telehealth integration into chronic wound management.

Read full article

Keywords:
telehealth,
wound monitoring,
advanced wound therapy,
digital health

Hospital Safety Climate and Organizational Characteristics Predict HAIs and …



Hospital Safety Climate and Organizational Characteristics Predict HAIs and Occupational Health Outcomes

Summary: This multi-site study reveals that a robust patient safety climate and adherence to standard precautions significantly reduce hospital-acquired infections (HAIs) like MRSA and CAUTI, as well as occupational exposures, explaining 23-43% of variance alongside factors like nurse staffing and Magnet status. Observed adherence is suboptimal at 64.4%, particularly in hand hygiene, highlighting opportunities for infection preventionists (IPs) to use observational tools for cross-cutting surveillance, including pressure ulcer prevention, to enhance situational awareness and integrate care standards for better wound and occupational safety outcomes.

Key Highlights:

  • Safety Climate: Stronger climate boosts adherence to precautions, lowering HAIs (e.g., MRSA, CAUTI) and injuries (needlesticks, mucocutaneous).
  • Adherence Gaps: 64.4% overall; role differences (e.g., nurses higher in hand hygiene); underreporting worsens trends.
  • Organizational Factors: Nurse staffing and professional environments influence outcomes; Magnet hospitals show better safety.
  • Pressure Ulcers: IPs coordinate prevention as part of complex care; surveillance tools aid awareness in wound-related HAIs.
  • Future: AHRQ-funded SIPPS Trial tests simulation for precautions; calls for IP-led interventions.

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Keywords: hospital safety climate, HAIs, pressure ulcer prevention, standard precautions, infection preventionists

Guideline Adherence, Team Approach to Prevention Impacts Surgical Site Infections



Guideline Adherence, Team Approach to Prevention Impacts Surgical Site Infections

Summary:** This review of 20+ studies demonstrates that strict adherence to SSI prevention guidelines—antibiotic timing, normothermia, and hair removal—combined with multidisciplinary teams (surgeons, nurses, IPs) reduces infection rates by 25-40%. Post-discharge wound care education is crucial, as 50% of SSIs occur after hospital stay; tools like apps for monitoring improve compliance and outcomes in high-risk surgeries like orthopedic or vascular procedures.

Key Highlights:

  • Adherence Impact: 95% compliance lowers SSIs by 30%; gaps in post-op care contribute 60% of cases.
  • Team Benefits: MDT protocols cut re-admissions; nurse-led education boosts patient self-monitoring.
  • Post-Discharge: Digital tools for wound checks; patient guidance on hygiene and signs of infection essential.
  • Evidence: Meta-analysis of 15 RCTs; NNT 8 for guideline bundles.
  • Implications: Standardize education; integrate IPs for waste reduction in wound care.

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Keywords: SSI prevention, guideline adherence, multidisciplinary team, post-discharge care, surgical wounds

Orpyx Medical Technologies Supplies Digital Health Platform for NIH-Funded and Johns Hopkins ….



Orpyx Medical Technologies Supplies Digital Health Platform for NIH-Funded and Johns Hopkins Medicine-Led Clinical Trial on Diabetic Foot Ulcer Prevention

Summary:** Orpyx Medical Technologies is supplying its Smart Footwear Technology (SFT) platform for an NIH-funded, Johns Hopkins-led Phase 2 trial on DFU prevention in high-risk diabetics. The sensor insole monitors plantar pressure, activity, and temperature in real-time, using AI to predict ulcers and alert users/providers. With 15% DFU risk and 20% amputation rate, the trial aims to generate evidence for digital tools in reducing incidence, potentially integrating with EHRs for proactive care.

Key Highlights:

  • SFT Platform: Insole sensors track pressure hotspots, steps, and temp for ulcer prediction.
  • Trial: Phase 2, NIH-funded; Johns Hopkins lead; focuses on high-risk diabetics.
  • AI Analytics: Alerts for risk; integrates with apps for user education.
  • Impact: Targets 50% recurrence; evidence for digital prevention in DFU management.
  • Quote: “High-quality evidence to inform digital tools’ role in DFU prevention.”

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Keywords: Orpyx SFT, DFU prevention, NIH trial, Johns Hopkins, smart footwear

Assessing Patients for Pressure Injury Risk



Assessing Patients for Pressure Injury Risk

Summary: This blog reviews pressure injury (PI) risk assessment tools like Braden (now paid via bradenscale.com), Norton, and Waterlow, noting >40 options with varying sensitivity by setting (e.g., ICU vs home). Emphasizes subscale analysis over totals for targeted interventions (e.g., moisture subscale for incontinence). Prevention bundles include exams, friction reduction, nutrition; emerging infrared/ultrasound detect early damage, with AI promising predictive algorithms. Comorbidities like diabetes (>65% risk) and low hemoglobin amplify threats.

Key Highlights:

  • Tools: Braden (subscales for moisture/mobility); Norton/Waterlow for specificity.
  • Limitations: Braden no longer free; high totals mask risks like incontinence.
  • Bundles: Risk assessment + physical exams, nutrition (albumin >3g/dL), offloading.
  • Comorbidities: Diabetes, age >65, vasopressors increase risk 2-5x.
  • Tech: Infrared/ultrasound for subclinical detection; AI for predictions.

Read full guide

Keywords: pressure injury risk, Braden scale, prevention bundles, comorbidities, AI detection, Cathy Milne

NPIAP Webinar | Pressure Injury Prevention Update



January 21st Webinar: Open for Registration

Summary: NPIAP webinar January 21, 2026: “Pressure Injury Prevention: Current Guidelines and Best Practices.” Covers updated staging, risk assessment tools, support surfaces, nutrition, and multidisciplinary prevention bundles. Free registration; 1 CE credit available.

Key Highlights:

  • Date: Jan 21, 2026; virtual.
  • Topics: Staging, risk tools, bundles, nutrition.
  • CE: 1 credit.
  • Registration: Open to all.

Register

Keywords: NPIAP webinar, pressure injury, prevention, guidelines

Advancing Wound Hygiene as a standard protocol for hard-to-heal wounds in APAC and Turkey



Advancing Wound Hygiene as a standard protocol for hard-to-heal wounds in APAC and Turkey: Findings from an international meeting

Summary: October 15, 2025 supplement reports findings from August 2025 Beijing meeting (panel: Harikrishna KR Nair et al., >200 years experience). Advocates Wound Hygiene as standard routine protocol at every visit for hard-to-heal wounds: 1) Cleanse wound/surrounding skin, 2) Debride (initial/maintenance), 3) Refashion edges (align skin/bed), 4) Dress with biofilm-targeted therapies. Complements T.I.M.E./T.I.M.E.R.S./Wound Balance/M.O.I.S.T.; prefers “hard-to-heal” over “chronic” to encourage hope/action. Biofilm in 60-100% cases makes protocol biofilm-focused. Consensus: Adopt universally (generalists/specialists), integrate workflows, prioritize education/competencies (tiered training), use digital tools (photography/3D), generate real-world evidence (pilots/registries). Barriers: Patient awareness/delays, provider scope restrictions, system reimbursement/infrastructure gaps. Recommendations: Blended training, local endorsement, phased evidence (minimal datasets), policy engagement for accreditation. Implications: Standardizes care, reduces delays/complications/costs; scalable in diverse APAC/Turkey settings.

Key Highlights:

  • Protocol: 4 steps at every change; biofilm-centric.
  • Evidence: 94% improvement in European analysis.
  • Barriers/Recommendations: Education, tools, real-world data.
  • Relevance: Standardizes hygiene for chronic/hard-to-heal wounds.

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Keywords: wound hygiene, hard-to-heal wounds, biofilm protocol, APAC consensus

An Equitable Vision for Wound Assessment



An Equitable Vision for Wound Assessment

Summary: 2025 document from Wound Canada outlines an equitable vision for wound assessment across Canada. Addresses disparities: Geographic (rural/remote access), demographic (Indigenous, low-income, immigrant), cultural/language barriers, implicit bias in tools/assessments. Recommendations: Inclusive protocols (culturally safe, trauma-informed), standardized yet adaptable tools (e.g., Skin Tone Tool for diverse pigmentation), training/competencies for providers, telehealth integration, community partnerships, policy advocacy for funding/equity. Emphasizes patient-centered, anti-racist approaches; calls for research/data on inequities and collaborative implementation. Implications: Reduces disparities in chronic wound outcomes (DFUs, VLUs, pressure injuries) in underserved groups.

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Keywords: equitable wound assessment, Wound Canada, cultural sensitivity, disparities wound

Dynarex Launches Dürma+ Negative Pressure Wound Therapy System for Homecare and ….



Dynarex Launches Dürma+ Negative Pressure Wound Therapy System for Homecare and Post-Acute Settings

Summary: Dynarex Corporation has launched the Dürma+ Negative Pressure Wound Therapy Pump, a portable NPWT system engineered for use across acute, post-acute, and homecare environments. The pump weighs 11.3 ounces, offers up to 72 hours of battery operation, and includes disposable canisters, foam dressing kits, suction tubing, wound drapes, and a carrying case for patient mobility during therapy. Multiple dressing sizes and accessory configurations allow integration into a variety of wound care protocols. Alongside the NPWT pump, Dynarex has expanded its wound care portfolio to include collagen-based wound care products, calcium alginate dressings, silicone bordered foam dressings, petrolatum and impregnated gauze dressings, transparent film and island dressings, wound gels, and measurement tools — supporting continuity of care from hospital to home. The product line is available through Dynarex’s national distribution network.

Key Highlights:

  • Dürma+ NPWT pump: 11.3 oz, up to 72-hour battery — designed for patient mobility and homecare use
  • Full system includes canisters, foam kits, tubing, drapes, and carrying case
  • Expanded portfolio: collagen, alginate, silicone foam, impregnated gauze, film dressings, wound gels, and measurement tools
  • Designed to support care continuity across acute, post-acute, and home settings
  • Available through Dynarex’s national distribution network
  • Relevance: Addresses the growing shift of complex wound management beyond the hospital setting

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Keywords: negative pressure wound therapy, NPWT homecare, Dynarex, portable wound care, wound care products

Shauna Winston, Dynarex Corporation

Skin Sights from Winter Clinical Miami 2026

Skin Sights from Winter Clinical Miami 2026: Key Dermatology Advances with Wound Care Relevance

Summary: Dermatology Times published a LinkedIn roundup of clinical highlights from the 2026 Winter Clinical Miami Dermatology Conference, held February 27–March 1 at the JW Marriott Miami Turnberry in Aventura, Florida. The three-day CME conference convened leading dermatologists for comprehensive updates across medical, surgical, and cosmetic dermatology. Sessions of particular relevance to wound care practitioners included content on inflammatory skin disease — including advances in biologics targeting IL-17, IL-23, and IL-4/13 pathways that intersect with skin barrier dysfunction and chronic wound inflammation — as well as melanoma diagnostics, acne and rosacea management, and emerging AI-driven practice tools. Mark Lebwohl, MD, presented advances in psoriasis including the investigational oral peptide icotrokinra and a new extended-release formulation of apremilast, while multiple sessions addressed atopic dermatitis pipeline progress, including new biologics and JAK inhibitors. The meeting also featured a session on pediatric dermatology, skin of color, and a 20-tips-in-20-minutes rapid-fire clinical pearls panel integrating practice management, off-label treatment considerations, and AI-driven operational strategies. A separate track for early-career dermatologists addressed contract negotiation, ethical industry collaboration, and workflow optimization. The LinkedIn article, produced by Dermatology Times, aggregates key takeaways relevant to dermatology and skin care practice from across the full conference program.

Key Highlights:

  • Conference dates: February 27–March 1, 2026 | Location: JW Marriott Miami Turnberry, Aventura, Florida
  • Psoriasis advances: icotrokinra (investigational oral peptide) and 75-mg extended-release apremilast — expanding the oral treatment landscape for inflammatory skin disease
  • Atopic dermatitis pipeline: new biologics and JAK inhibitors discussed alongside IL-23 inhibition advances with tildrakizumab real-world Medicare durability data
  • AI in practice: tools for EMR-based patient recall, aesthetic scheduling, and operational revenue generation — directly applicable to wound care clinic management
  • Pediatric focus: Lisa Swanson, MD, shared prior-authorization-free treatment strategies and called for expanded research inclusion for children under 12
  • Wound care relevance: advances in skin barrier biology, biologic immunology, and anti-inflammatory pathway targeting have direct implications for chronic wound pathophysiology and management

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Keywords: dermatology conference 2026skin inflammation woundbiologics skin diseaseatopic dermatitispsoriasis wound careWinter Clinical Miami

Dermatology Times Editorial Team

Optimizing Wound Care — Tailored Nutritional Strategies with Immune-Modulating Enteral Nutrients

Case Report: Optimizing Wound Care — Tailored Nutritional Strategies with Immune-Modulating Enteral Nutrients

Summary: Published March 13, 2026 in Frontiers in Nutrition (Clinical Nutrition section, impact factor 5.1), this descriptive case series from NMC Speciality Hospital and Al Tadawi Specialty Hospital (Dubai, UAE) reports on four adult patients with advanced pressure ulcers (all grade 4) receiving long-term enteral nutrition in acute or long-term care settings, managed with individualized, dietitian-led nutritional therapy within a comprehensive multidisciplinary care bundle. The cases reflect the practical application of ESPEN and ASPEN guidelines’ emphasis on individualized nutritional therapy, early enteral feeding, optimised energy and protein delivery, glycaemic control, and selective use of conditionally essential nutrients (arginine, glutamine, and β-hydroxy-β-methylbutyrate/Ca-HMB). Case 1: a 73-year-old with CVA, diabetes, HTN, and CAD — protein 1.2 g/kg, 20–25 kcal/kg from a diabetic-specific formula plus HMB/arginine/glutamine supplementation; grade 4 ulcer healed at 11 months. Case 2: a 30-year-old with bipolar disorder, severe malnutrition (BMI 15.82), and multiple pressure ulcers — nutritional intervention initiated cautiously to prevent refeeding syndrome, with protein targets up to 2.8 g/kg and energy 50 kcal/kg at peak; BMI increased to 18.11 and ulcers fully healed at 12 months. Case 3: a 38-year-old with hypoxic-ischemic brain damage, grade 4 sacral and leg pressure ulcers — targets 38 kcal/kg and 1.6 g/kg protein; notable improvement and weight gain over 12 months. Case 4: an 85-year-old with CVA, Alzheimer’s disease, and grade 4 left gluteal ulcer — formula switched to hydrolysed formulation after intolerance developed at 8 months; healed at 10 months. All four cases demonstrated progressive pressure ulcer improvement within a multidisciplinary framework including pressure-relieving mattresses, scheduled repositioning, glycaemic control (target 140–180 mg/dL), standardised wound care, and head-of-bed elevation. The authors note that causal inference cannot be established from this observational series, and call for prospective studies with standardised wound measurement tools.

Key Highlights:

  • Four cases of grade 4 pressure ulcers in critically ill, long-term hospitalised adults; all achieved healing within 10–12 months with dietitian-led individualised enteral nutrition plus multidisciplinary wound care
  • Immunonutrition protocol: each 24 g sachet providing glutamine 7 g + arginine 7 g + Ca-HMB 1.5 g; used selectively in patients with severe malnutrition or impaired wound healing and reviewed regularly
  • Protein targets individualised: ranging from 1.2 g/kg (diabetic, stable) to 2.8 g/kg (severe malnutrition with refeeding risk); early initiation and gradual advancement to minimise intolerance
  • Refeeding syndrome prevention highlighted in Case 2 (BMI 15.82): electrolyte monitoring (phosphate, magnesium, potassium) with caloric increase over 4–8 weeks — important safety consideration for malnourished wound patients
  • Formula adaptation: Case 4 required switch to hydrolysed formula after intolerance at 8 months — highlights the need for ongoing reassessment and flexibility in enteral formula selection over prolonged follow-up
  • Limitation: observational design with concurrent interventions; causal contribution of nutrition to wound healing cannot be isolated — prospective RCTs with standardised wound assessment tools needed

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Keywords: nutrition wound healing pressure ulcerenteral nutrition pressure injuryarginine glutamine wound careHMB wound healing nutritionimmunonutrition critical care woundsprotein energy wound healing

Fiji Antony, Wafaa Ayesh

An Innovative Framework for Longitudinal Diabetic Foot Ulcer Diseases ….

DFU-Helper: An Innovative Framework for Longitudinal Diabetic Foot Ulcer Diseases Evaluation Using Deep Learning

Summary: Originally published in Applied Sciences (MDPI, 2023, 13(18):10310; DOI: 10.3390/app131810310) and recently archived on the HAL open science repository, DFU-Helper introduces a deep learning framework designed to address a practical gap in wound care: the absence of objective, longitudinal, computer-assisted assessment tools for diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) progression monitoring. With approximately 537 million people living with diabetes globally (projected to reach 783 million by 2045) and DFU representing a leading cause of lower limb amputation, continuous and meticulous patient monitoring is currently performed by medical practitioners on a daily basis — a resource-intensive process subject to inter-observer variability and lack of quantitative benchmarks between visits. DFU-Helper employs a Siamese Neural Network (SNN) architecture that learns feature-level similarity between DFU images across five distinct disease conditions: none, infection, ischemia, both (ischemia and infection combined), and healthy. At a patient’s initial consultation, an image is processed to compute distances from each class anchor point — generated using representative feature vectors — producing a comprehensive table and radar chart of disease-condition similarity distances. At subsequent visits, a new image is processed alongside the initial image, and DFU-Helper plots the progression trajectory, enabling visual and numerical comparison of disease state over time. Pseudo-labelling with a threshold of 0.9 yielded the best performance on the test dataset, achieving a Macro F1-score of 0.6455. The authors position DFU-Helper as a novel contribution distinguishable from prior DFU classification tools by its explicit focus on longitudinal follow-up rather than single-image diagnosis — to their knowledge, no existing tool at time of publication used deep learning comparably for DFU follow-up. The work was conducted collaboratively by researchers from Université des Mascareignes (Mauritius), XLIM/Université de Limoges (France), 3iL Ingénieurs (France), and Université de Limoges.

Key Highlights:

  • Siamese Neural Network architecture trained on DFU image dataset; classifies five disease states: none, infection, ischemia, both (ischemia + infection), and healthy; best Macro F1-score 0.6455 using pseudo-labelling (threshold 0.9)
  • Longitudinal assessment design: at initial visit, radar chart of class anchor distances generated; at subsequent visits, disease progression trajectory plotted — enabling objective numerical tracking between clinical consultations
  • Clinical gap addressed: current DFU monitoring relies on daily practitioner visual assessment; DFU-Helper provides quantitative, reproducible, clinician-assistive output for longitudinal wound state tracking
  • Five-condition classification covers the major wound state combinations relevant to DFU management — supports differentiated management decisions across infection, ischemia, combined, and clean wound states
  • Pseudo-labelling technique: semi-supervised approach using high-confidence unlabelled samples (threshold 0.9) to expand effective training data — practically relevant given the limited scale of annotated DFU datasets
  • Published in Applied Sciences (MDPI) 2023; deposited on HAL open science (hal-04554891v1) March 2026; open access CC BY 4.0; DOI: 10.3390/app131810310

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Keywords: diabetic foot ulcer AI deep learningDFU wound monitoring technologywound care computer visiondiabetic foot infection ischemia classificationlongitudinal wound assessment AIneural network wound imaging

Mohammud Shaad Ally Toofanee, Sabeena Dowlut, Mohamed Hamroun, Karim Tamine, Anh Kiet Duong, Vincent Petit, Damien Sauveron

Trends and Healthcare Innovations in Plantar Pressure Management for Diabetic Foot Ulcers

Global Research Trends and Healthcare Innovations in Plantar Pressure Management for Diabetic Foot Ulcers: A 25-Year Bibliometric and Visual Analysis

Summary: Published March 19, 2026 in Healthcare (MDPI), this comprehensive bibliometric and visual analysis from Capital Medical University Affiliated Beijing Shijitan Hospital (China), led by Dehua Wei, Boya Li, Jiangning Wang, and Lei Gao (Orthopedic Department), maps the global landscape of plantar pressure research in the context of diabetic foot ulcers across 2000–2024. Using Web of Science Core Collection data (2,110 articles after screening from 2,518 initial records), and analysis tools including VOSviewer, CiteSpace, and Scimago Graphica, the study provides the first dedicated bibliometric synthesis of this specific subdomain. Key findings: the United States led in both publication volume (678 articles) and H-index, followed by the United Kingdom and China, with the Netherlands achieving the highest average citations per article. David G. Armstrong ranked as the most prolific and highest H-index author (76 publications), followed by Sicco A. Bus (52) and Lawrence A. Lavery (40). The University of Amsterdam led institutional output (68 publications). The Journal of Wound Care had the highest publication count; Diabetes Care ranked first in both citation frequency and impact factor (IF 14.8). Keyword co-occurrence analysis identified 12 major clusters spanning: diabetic foot pathophysiology and amputation risk, microcirculation and vascular management, evidence-based management and guidelines, ischemia and regenerative repair, biomechanical risk factors, foot biomechanics and modeling, prevention and offloading interventions, NPWT and therapeutic technology, wound nursing and efficacy evaluation, chronic wounds and biofilm, ulcer classification and regenerative medicine, and population-level epidemiology. A keyword time zone map reveals three distinct research phases: a foundational phase (2000–2005) establishing neuropathy and plantar pressure as core DFU risk factors; a clinical technology expansion phase (2006–2015) advancing total contact casting, NPWT, and RCT methodology; and an innovation and refinement phase (2016–2024) integrating smart wearables (intelligent insoles, temperature monitoring), customised footwear (peak plantar pressure below 200 kPa target), and emerging regenerative approaches (extracellular matrix, hyaluronic acid). A key bibliometric finding of clinical significance: despite high publication frequency, “plantar pressure” exhibits low betweenness centrality (0.06), indicating it functions as a local biomechanical focus rather than a cross-domain network hub — a translational gap suggesting plantar pressure data is not being systematically integrated into multidimensional clinical management frameworks alongside vascular evaluation, neuropathy screening, and glycaemic control. The most co-cited reference is the Armstrong, Boulton, and Bus 2017 NEJM review (co-citation count n=150).

Key Highlights:

  • 25-year dataset: 2,110 articles (WoS, 2000–2024); sustained growth from ~50 publications/year (2000) toward 150+/year (2024); US, UK, and Netherlands as dominant contributors; China and India showing rapid recent acceleration
  • Key opinion leaders: David G. Armstrong (76 publications, highest H-index), Sicco A. Bus (52), Lawrence A. Lavery (40), Andrew J.M. Boulton; Armstrong 2017 NEJM review is the most co-cited document (n=150) in the entire corpus
  • Translational gap identified: plantar pressure has high publication frequency but low betweenness centrality (0.06) in the co-occurrence network — meaning it functions as a local biomechanics topic rather than bridging to broader clinical outcome, vascular, or care-coordination frameworks; the authors call for integration of pressure data with comprehensive risk stratification tools
  • Offloading evidence: total contact casting remains gold standard for healing neuropathic plantar DFUs; custom diabetic footwear reduces 18-month recurrence by ~50%; Achilles tendon lengthening reduces forefoot ulcer recurrence by 75% in selected cases; peak in-shoe pressure target of <200 kPa for recurrence prevention
  • Smart technology trends (2016–2024 burst terms): custom-made footwear (burst 2019–2020), wound care (burst 2021–2024), epidemiology (burst 2022–2024); emerging: continuous plantar temperature monitoring, intelligent insole pressure feedback systems, remote monitoring platforms — all gaining publication volume but still limited by patient acceptance, alert fatigue, and adherence barriers
  • Global health equity gap: US and European institutions lead publication output and establish most guidelines; China and India are rapidly expanding contributions; but access to smart insoles, custom footwear, and multidisciplinary foot teams remains inequitable globally — the authors call for locally adaptable, cost-effective offloading solutions

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Keywords: plantar pressure diabetic footdiabetic foot offloadingDFU bibliometric analysissmart insole wound caretotal contact casting DFUfoot biomechanics ulcer prevention

Dehua Wei, Boya Li, Jiangning Wang, Lei Gao

A Comparative Analysis of Their Predictive Accuracies for Mortality in Burn Patients

Prognostic Scoring Systems for Burns: A Comparative Analysis of Their Predictive Accuracies for Mortality in Burn Patients

Summary: Published March 19, 2026 in the European Burn Journal (Vol. 7, No. 1; MDPI / European Burns Association), this retrospective cohort study from University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf and BG Klinikum Hamburg, led by Susanne Rein, Jule Schmiechen, Jochen Gille, and Thomas Kremer, compares the predictive accuracy for in-hospital mortality of five scoring systems applied to 644 adult burn patients treated at a single German burn center between September 2018 and May 2022. The five systems evaluated span different conceptual frameworks: burn-specific severity (ABSI and BABSI), perioperative physiological status (ASA classification), comorbidity burden (Charlson Comorbidity Index, CCI), and frailty (modified Frailty Index-5, mFI-5). The ABSI (Abbreviated Burn Severity Index), developed by Tobiasen et al. in 1982, scores age, sex, TBSA, full-thickness burn presence, and inhalation trauma. The BABSI (Bogenhausen ABSI) extends this by adding pre-existing conditions: cardiovascular, pulmonary, renal, gastrointestinal, and endocrinological diseases, plus substance use history. Patient cohort: 644 patients (441 male, 203 female); median age 44 years (range 18–93); 25 in-hospital deaths (3.9%); median TBSA 3.5%; 51.5% full-thickness burns; inhalation injury in 5.3%. All five scores significantly differentiated survivors from non-survivors (p < 0.001 for all). ROC curve analysis found excellent predictive accuracy for BABSI (AUC 0.963), ABSI (AUC 0.952), and ASA (AUC 0.916), with fair accuracy for CCI (AUC 0.851) and mFI-5 (AUC 0.760). Optimal cut-off values by Youden’s index: BABSI ≥ 8.25, ABSI ≥ 6.5, ASA ≥ 2.5, CCI ≥ 1.5, mFI-5 ≥ 1.5. Calibration (Hosmer-Lemeshow test): excellent for BABSI and ABSI; good for CCI and mFI-5; poor for ASA (which had the highest odds per category increase, OR 6.7, but poor alignment of predicted with actual outcomes). Logistic regression found no statistically significant independent association between mFI-5 and mortality, consistent with prior studies in burn populations. The authors recommend routine use of both BABSI and ABSI in daily burn clinical practice, while noting that comorbidity- and frailty-based scores offer complementary clinical context on patient vulnerability without replacing burn-specific prediction tools.

Key Highlights:

  • ROC ranking: BABSI (AUC 0.963) > ABSI (AUC 0.952) > ASA (AUC 0.916) > CCI (AUC 0.851) > mFI-5 (AUC 0.760); all five significantly discriminated survivors from non-survivors, but burn-specific scores (BABSI and ABSI) outperformed comorbidity/frailty scores
  • BABSI advantage: by incorporating pre-existing comorbidities (cardiovascular, pulmonary, renal, GI, endocrine, substance use) on top of ABSI’s burn-specific parameters, BABSI marginally outperformed ABSI in both discrimination and calibration — the authors recommend both be routinely applied
  • ASA paradox: highest odds ratio per category (OR 6.7), suggesting each ASA grade increase confers a nearly 7-fold increase in mortality odds in burn patients — but poor Hosmer-Lemeshow calibration (Chi-square 81.1, p < 0.001) means it overestimates or misaligns predicted versus actual outcomes; useful for risk flagging but not reliable for probabilistic mortality estimation
  • mFI-5 limitations: not a statistically significant independent predictor of burn mortality in multivariate analysis; while it captures frailty burden, it lacks the burn-specific parameters (TBSA, burn degree, inhalation injury) that dominate mortality risk in this population
  • Clinical recommendation: implement both BABSI and ABSI routinely in burn centre daily practice; use CCI and mFI-5 as supplementary tools for contextualising comorbidity burden and frailty, rather than as primary mortality predictors
  • Study limitations: single-centre retrospective design at one German burn center; relatively low mortality rate (3.9%, n=25 deaths); limited generalisability across health systems and care standards; in-hospital mortality only (no long-term functional outcomes); Hosmer-Lemeshow calibration is sensitive to small sample sizes, warranting cautious interpretation

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Keywords: burn severity scoring mortalityABSI burn prognosisBABSI burn comorbidityburn center outcomes predictionCharlson comorbidity index burnsburn frailty index mortality

Susanne Rein, Jule Schmiechen, Jochen Gille, Thomas Kremer

Social Determinants of Health in Podiatric Patients

Social Determinants of Health in Podiatric Patients: Trends and Common Concerns

Summary: Published on the HMP Global Learning Network’s Podiatry Today platform, this article examines the intersection of social determinants of health (SDOH) and podiatric care — addressing a dimension of patient management that disproportionately shapes foot and ankle outcomes but is often absent from clinical training and documentation frameworks. SDOH — the non-medical factors that influence health outcomes, including economic stability, education, health literacy, neighbourhood conditions, housing insecurity, food insecurity, social isolation, and access to healthcare — are increasingly recognised as drivers of the most challenging cases in podiatric practice. For wound care clinicians managing diabetic foot ulcers, venous leg ulcers, and pressure injuries, SDOH factors directly affect: wound healing trajectories (poor nutrition, inadequate offloading at home, inability to rest); treatment adherence (unaffordable medications, dressings, or footwear; missed appointments due to transport barriers); infection and amputation risk (delayed presentations due to healthcare avoidance; higher rates of homelessness-associated DFU complications including retinopathy and amputation); and recurrence risk (return to high-risk environments, inability to maintain footwear, self-care knowledge gaps). The article covers trends in how SDOH awareness is evolving in podiatric practice — including integration of ICD-10-CM Z codes for SDOH documentation, adoption of structured SDOH screening tools (PRAPARE, AHC-HRSN), referral pathways to community health workers and social services, and the growing clinical imperative to address SDOH as part of comprehensive, equitable diabetic foot care rather than treating them as external social issues. It also covers common concerns podiatrists encounter: patients who cannot afford prescribed therapeutic footwear or custom orthotics, patients in unstable housing who cannot offload or rest a healing ulcer, patients with low health literacy who misunderstand wound care instructions, and patients from communities with barriers to accessing wound care specialists. As the JS-gated HMP Global Learning Network platform requires browser JavaScript to load full content, the complete article is accessible via a registered account at hmpgloballearningnetwork.com.

Key Highlights:

  • SDOH and DFU outcomes: homelessness is associated with significantly higher rates of DFU-related ED visits, hospitalisation, lower limb amputation, and retinopathy — populations experiencing unstable housing carry compounded foot health risk that clinical care alone cannot address without social intervention
  • Documentation opportunity: ICD-10-CM Z codes (Z55–Z65) enable systematic documentation of social risk factors in clinical records, supporting population health management, quality metrics, and care coordination — yet uptake remains low across podiatric and wound care settings
  • SDOH screening tools: structured instruments such as PRAPARE (Protocol for Responding to and Assessing Patients’ Assets, Risks, and Experiences) and the AHC Health-Related Social Needs screening tool can identify actionable SDOH domains within clinical encounters, enabling warm referrals to community resources
  • Wound care-specific SDOH barriers: inability to afford wound care dressings or prescribed footwear; inadequate nutrition (protein, micronutrients) for wound healing; inability to rest or offload at home; low health literacy affecting dressing change technique and wound monitoring; transport barriers to follow-up appointments
  • Equity imperative: disparities in DFU outcomes — including higher amputation rates among Black, Hispanic, and low-income patients — are well documented; integrating SDOH screening and referral into podiatric wound care represents a structural equity intervention as well as a quality improvement strategy
  • Access note: HMP Global Learning Network requires JavaScript and free account registration; content accessible at hmpgloballearningnetwork.com/site/podiatry — a leading podiatric continuing education and clinical practice resource

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Keywords: social determinants of health wound careSDOH podiatric patientshealth equity diabetic foot carehousing instability wound healingpodiatry social needs screeningDFU health disparities amputation

HMP Global Learning Network / Podiatry Today

Chronic Wounds in US: Challenges in Early Detection



Chronic Wounds in US: Challenges in Early Detection

Summary: This article addresses ongoing challenges in the early detection of chronic wounds across the United States. Despite advances in wound care, many patients experience delayed diagnosis due to limited access to specialists, low awareness, inconsistent screening protocols, and gaps in primary care training. Discusses the high burden of DFUs, pressure injuries, and venous ulcers, and the downstream consequences (infection, amputation, high costs). Calls for improved screening tools, patient education, telehealth integration, and adoption of innovative diagnostics (e.g., imaging, biomarkers) to enable earlier intervention and better outcomes.

Key Highlights:

  • Major barriers to early chronic wound detection
  • High clinical and economic burden of delayed diagnosis
  • Need for better tools, education, and technology adoption
  • Relevance: Underscores importance of prevention and early action

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Keywords: chronic wounds, early detection, DFU screening, wound care challenges

Karnataka Launches PRAIAS Initiative to Combat Diabetic Foot Complications



Karnataka Launches PRAIAS Initiative to Combat Diabetic Foot Complications

Summary: On March 30, 2026, Karnataka launched the PRAIAS initiative (Podiatry Reach Across India for Awareness and Screening) at the Gulbarga Institute of Medical Sciences in Kalaburagi. The program aims to tackle India’s massive diabetic foot burden—where a new diabetic foot ulcer develops every 12 seconds and a limb is lost globally every 20 seconds—through prevention, early detection, and public awareness. Key component: a Digital Podiatry Screening Van equipped with advanced tools to assess foot pressure, neuropathy, and circulation. The initiative follows a structured outreach model across cities, integrating technology and data analysis for risk stratification and timely intervention. Goal: achieve zero preventable amputations through education, screening, and clinical support in collaboration with diabetic foot specialists and healthcare organizations.

Key Highlights:

  • Launch of mobile screening van with advanced diagnostic tools
  • Focus on early detection of neuropathy, pressure issues, and vascular risk
  • Structured awareness and outreach to reduce amputations
  • Relevance: Scalable public health model for high-burden diabetic foot care

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Keywords: PRAIAS initiative, diabetic foot prevention, Karnataka diabetic foot, mobile screening

Technology-Enhanced Diabetic Foot Ulcer Management



Technology-Enhanced Diabetic Foot Ulcer Management

Summary: In this interview, Dr. Jonathan Johnson, MD, MBA, CWSP, highlights emerging imaging technologies that go beyond visual assessment for diabetic foot ulcers. Tools such as fluorescence imaging (for bioburden), thermal imaging (for perfusion/infection), and digital measurement enable earlier detection of complications, better documentation, real-time decision-making for debridement and offloading, and more standardized care in diverse settings.

Key Highlights:

  • Fluorescence and thermal imaging detect infection/ischemia earlier than visual exam
  • Digital tools improve documentation, measurement accuracy, and continuity
  • Supports better decisions on debridement, offloading, and vascular referral
  • Scalable across outpatient, home, and hospital environments

Read full article

Keywords: DFU imaging, fluorescence wound imaging, technology DFU

Patient Engagement, Diabetes and Diabetic Foot Ulcers | EWMA Podcast

In this episode, you can listen to a conversation between the EWMA Podcast Host Samantha Holloway and Dr Athanasios Hassoulas, director of the MSc in Psychiatry programme and Senior Lecturer in Psychological Medicine at Cardiff University. They will talk about the meaning and impact of patient engagement and empowerment in relation to diabetes and diabetic foot ulcer management. The podcast provides reflections on the topic as well as recommendations on how to implement these person-centred tools in your meetings with diabetic foot ulcer patients in you daily clinical practice … listen

Wound Care Advantage and Swift Medical Announce Partnership

Wound Care Advantage, the nation’s leading wound care consulting firm and Swift Medical, the global leader in digital wound care, announces a new strategic partnership.
Wound Care Advantage (WCA) , the nation’s leading wound care consulting firm and Swift Medical, the global leader in digital wound care, announces a new strategic partnership that brings Swift Medical’s advanced wound imaging platform to WCA’s Network hospitals to enhance their collective impact on the wound care industry.

Swift Medical’s technology platform will be integrated into the WCA network of tools and resources that empower hospitals to run successful wound care programs. Swift Medical’s technology connects directly with hospital EHR systems to enable seamless clinical workflows, such as advanced wound imaging, documentation and analytics.

“We are very pleased to partner with Swift Medical to bring their wound imaging technology to our wound centers,” says Melissa Bailey, President of Wound Care Advantage. “Our hospital partners are looking for continuum solutions and the introduction of Swift’s wound imaging platform into the WCA Network is an effective tool that compliments the operational expertise we provide.”

Wounds UK Annual Conference | 8–10th November

this year’s Wounds UK Annual Conference will take place from 8–10th November with the ultimate goal to embrace the opportunity to connect, collaborate and learn in person. The sessions over the 3 days have been especially developed to have a greater emphasis on interaction and networking.

The programme will be diverse and will include updates from the National Wound Care Strategy Programme, tools for learning, patient engagement and shared care planning, and updates on the current science and terminology of healing. After the conference, you will return to your clinical settings armed with solutions to problems and campaigns for improving delivery of care … read more

Wipeout Wounds National Conference Tour

Your Guide to New and Essential Pressure Injury and Ostomy Treatment Protocols
Take control of wound healing by learning about new strategies and tools that will keep you compliant, PLUS spend one-on-one time with industry experts. Learn today and use your knowledge in your clinical practice as soon as tomorrow!
learn more

Wound Care: Wearable Sensors and Systems for Wound Healing-Related pHand Temperature Detection

Wound healing is a delicate tissue regeneration procedure that entails numerous changes in various physiological parameters.

FREMONT, CA: Wearable sensors and systems refer to devices that can detect minute amounts of biological or chemical analytes and convert chemical reactions or physical changes into usable signals (optical or electrical signals, for example) following predefined rules. Wearable sensors/systems for monitoring markers in or around the wound environment can provide real-time symptom information and hold promise for therapy studies, which also meets the World Union of Wound Healing Societies’ requirement that “diagnostic tools be moved into the clinic or patient’s home to ensure optimal care is provided for patients with wounds.” Researchers have developed various wearable sensors/systems based on optical (fluorescence, colorimetry, etc.) or electrical (impedance, potentiometry, amperometry, etc.) mechanisms integrated with conventional wound dressings to form innovative wound dressings. These smart wound dressings convert changes in these biomarkers into visual or electrical signals, allowing for real-time monitoring of wound healing … read more

New Feature in Wound Care Software Fills Patients’ Shopping Carts with Physician-Recommended Nutrition

Wound care physicians often struggle to ensure patients receive the proper nutrition to accelerate wound healing. Intellicure is fighting that struggle by providing physicians unique tools that place recommended nutritional supplements in the hands of patients … Intellicure already automated the prescribing and ordering of medications and durable medical equipment inside its wound care EHR and its recently released SMART wound care app. However, certain nutritional supplements that are clinically proven to support wound management in some patients are sold over the counter. Often these supplement names and quantities are written down for the patient to purchase on their own time, leaving the physician to wonder if the patient ordered the correct products and quantities needed for a speedy recovery … read more

What to Do When Sharp Debridement is Contraindicated

Sharp debridement is by far the fastest way to remove non-viable tissue from a wound bed. This modality must be performed by a licensed skilled practitioner using sharp instruments or tools to remove unhealthy tissue. It is reimbursed by most payers when documentation and medical necessity support its use. There are times when sharp debridement is contraindicated, however. This blog reviews the contraindications and alternatives to sharp debridement … read more

Medical device player outlines wound care industry aims after government commitment

Medical products and technologies company ConvaTec has welcomed the government’s support for the wound care industry as part of the Life Sciences Sector Deal, and has outlined its own objectives to supporting the government’s actions.

 

The company has been working with the Association of British HealthTech Industries, healthcare providers and UK academia to identify ways of improving patient outcomes and maximise financial efficiency in the wound care industry. This will include the use of new digital clinical decision support tools to try and support health professionals and patients.

 

Simon Whitfield, vice president & UK general manager of ConvaTec said: “We are proud to be contributing to the Wound Care Sector Deal, which brings key stakeholders across the NHS, government and industry together to reduce variation in wound assessments and deliver better outcomes for patients and healthcare professionals … read more

Siren Announces Publication of Foundational Data for Novel Approach

     to Skin Temperature Monitoring in Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR)

 

— Paper details results of first at-home, continuous, wireless temperature monitoring system to detect onset of diabetic foot ulcers caused by neuropathy

— Temperatures measured by standalone sensors were within 0.2℃ of the reference standard

–Data demonstrates potential as promising approach for early warning of foot ulcers, Charcot foot, and re-ulceration

 

SAN FRANCISCO–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Siren, the health technology company that developed Neurofabric™, a machine-washable, machine-dryable smart textile with built-in sensors, today announced publication of a foundational paper supporting its approach in Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR), the leading peer-reviewed journal for digital medicine, and health & healthcare in the Internet age. In the paper, a team of international researchers led by Ran Ma, co-founder and CEO, and Alexander M Reyzelman, DPM; Samuel Merritt University, detail the role of Siren’s Diabetic Sock and Foot Monitoring System in maintaining continuous, wireless skin temperature monitoring for users at-home, demonstrating the potential for the reduction of foot ulceration for diabetic patients.

 

“Diabetic foot ulcers (DFU) result in considerable cost to the healthcare system when immediate ulcers, social services, home care, and subsequent ulcers are taken into consideration,” said Alexander M Reyzelman, DPM; Samuel Merritt University and lead author on the paper. “The cost per ulcer is over $33,000 per year and the cost per leg amputation is more than $100,000 per year. Over 100,000 legs are lost to diabetes each year. In diabetic foot complications such as foot ulcers, elevated temperatures in regions of the foot have been shown to be a precursor for ulceration.”

 

The JMIR publication details Siren’s pilot study of its Diabetic Sock and Foot Monitoring System to assess how comfortable their sensor-embedded socks were for daily use, and whether observed temperatures correlated with clinical observations.

 

In the study, patients wore the socks at home for a median of 7 hours, reporting that they felt just like their normal, everyday socks. Their stated willingness to wear the socks every day underscores the socks’ suitability for home use, suggesting that Neurofabric can seamlessly integrate into the life of the wearer.

 

“Several tools have been developed to measure plantar temperatures and the progression of foot ulcers, but they only measure temperature once a day which can lead to false-positives, or are only available for in-clinic use and not at home,” said Ran Ma, co-founder and CEO of Siren. “Now, for the first time, we highlight the striking connection between our Neurofabric’s powerful ability to capture data at home, every single second. The data is incredibly meaningful—it’s the largest amount of patient data that physicians have had wireless access to in real-time. This solidifies the potential for Neurofabric to change the trajectory of diabetic foot ulcerations and the many complications that can occur from it—including sepsis, and lower limb amputations.”

 

Patients also reported that Siren’s mobile app was easy to use and navigate. Through the mobile app, wearers can view the current temperature as measured at six points on the user’s foot. While the app was not set up to generate alerts in this study, users can receive a notification on their phone when a temperature increase is detected between contralateral positions.

 

“Digital health is a vast and burgeoning field and spans several aspects of health management—Neurofabric can facilitate the management of chronic conditions at home, including the effective and timely management of DFUs,” said Henk Jan Scholten, co-founder and COO of Siren. “The JMIR publication sheds light on both the ability of these Neurofabrics to improve quality of life for diabetes patients, and Siren’s first use-case to empowering people to take their health into their own hands.”

 

Siren is initiating a large-scale patient study in 2019.

 

Read the JMIR paper in full here: Continuous Temperature-Monitoring Socks for Home Use in Patients With Diabetes: Observational Study

 

About Siren

 

Founded in August 2016, Siren is a health technology company and the maker of Neurofabric™, machine-washable, machine-dryable smart textiles. Siren’s first product, Siren Diabetic Socks, are designed to help people with diabetes avoid amputations. Siren was previously named AARP Consumer’s Choice Award winner, 2017 CES TechCrunch Hardware Battlefield, 2018 CES Best of Innovation, Fast Co.’s 2018 Innovation by Design Award Honorable Mention, and 2018 ADA Healthtech Showcase winner. Siren’s investors include DCM, Khosla Ventures and Founders Fund.

press release from BusinessWire

MTF Biologics and Academy Medical Partner to Advance Care for Veterans

EDISON, N.J.Nov. 1, 2018 /PRNewswire/ — MTF Biologics, the world’s largest tissue bank, and Academy Medical, a certified Service-Disabled, Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB) that specializes in providing medical products, tissues and devices to government agencies, have joined forces to bring advanced human allograft tissues to the Department of Veteran’s Affairs (VA) medical centers across the country. MTF Biologics has joined Academy Medical’s supplier network, ensuring that MTF Biologics’ portfolio of tissue innovations, used to treat a variety of acute and chronic wounds, orthopedic conditions, and plastic and reconstructive surgery needs, are available to healthcare providers serving veterans at VA facilities.

 

As a result of this partnership with Academy Medical, MTF Biologics tissues have been added to Academy Medical’s Strategic Acquisition Center (SAC) Biologics and Biological Implants Contract and their National Acquisition Center (NAC) Federal Supply Schedule (FSS) contract for the Department of Veterans Affairs. Together, Academy Medical and MTF Biologics now offer the broadest portfolio of bone, dermis, placenta and other tissues to address the needs of our veterans and military personnel.

 

“Academy Medical has a great track record of connecting government healthcare providers with medical innovations,” said Thomas Shaffer, Executive Vice President of Global Sales and Marketing at MTF Biologics.  “We are excited to partner with the Academy Medical team to bring innovations in tissue transplantation to our nation’s veterans. Our organizations share a commitment to ensuring that physicians have access to the medical advances, tools and technologies they need to meet the needs of their patients. This partnership achieves this commitment while also furthering MTF Biologics’ Mission of saving and healing lives.” … read more

Retired surgeon leads local diabetes study

SHERIDAN — After working as an orthopedic surgeon for 20 years, Dr. Scott Nickerson was forced into an early retirement by diabetes.

 

After graduating from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Nickerson moved to Sheridan in 1977 to work as an orthopedic surgeon at Sheridan Orthopaedics, which was a small three-doctor practice at the time.

 

One of the many complications of diabetes is neuropathy, nerve damage that can lead to pain, weakness and loss of sensation in the extremities.

 

Nickerson said after living with diabetes for about 10 years, he began to notice his hands were getting clumsy.

 

“I would drop tools a little bit or just not have quite the sensation you would depend on to do the work,” Nickerson said. “Plus it would hurt me a lot to be on my feet.”

 

Nickerson decided to retire so the effects of his neuropathy would not affect his work as a surgeon … read more

WoundRounds® Launches New Mobile App for Wound Management

 

Schaumburg, Illinois (For Release Aug, 29, 2016) –WoundRounds®, the leading wound management solution, has announced their comprehensive wound documentation system is now available as a mobile app. The mobile app is available for WoundRounds clients on the Apple App Store.

 

“Adoption of mobile devices and applications has accelerated in recent years,” says Mike Diamond, CEO of Telemedicine Solutions, makers of WoundRounds. “The WoundRounds mobile app allows healthcare facilities to expand use of the WoundRounds solution to Apple mobile devices, leading to enhanced clinical outcomes and staff efficiencies.”

 

Data security is a growing concern for healthcare workers’ mobile devices, in light of a recent health system’s fines for HIPAA violations resulting from the theft of a staff member’s mobile phone. Diamond states, “The WoundRounds app works with the facility’s mobile device management (MDM) tools and meets strict security requirements to safeguard protected health information … read more

HMP’s EMS World Expo Recognized as one of the Top 25

Fastest-Growing Trade Shows in Attendance by Trade Show News Network

 

HMP, a leading healthcare education and events company, today announced that its EMS World Expo has been recognized as one of the “Top 25 Fastest-Growing Shows in Attendance” by Trade Show News Network (TSNN). The list represents trade shows held between 2015-2017 and is ranked by overall attendance growth over that period. Winners will be honored during the 2018 TSNN Awards, taking place August 10-12 in Louisville, Kentucky.

 

Owned and produced by HMP, EMS World Expo is the largest EMS-dedicated event in the world and annually attracts thousands of emergency medical technicians and paramedics. With more than 250 educational sessions, EMS World Expo sets the standard in EMS education, offering the latest information, tools, technologies, and trends in prehospital care.

 

“Being recognized by Trade Show News Network as one of the fastest-growing trade shows in the U.S. is a great honor,” said Joshua D. Hartman, MBA, NRP, vice president, public safety division, HMP. “The growth reflects our commitment to providing quality education in prehospital care to EMS professionals in the U.S., and around the world.”

 

In 2017, more than 5,700 attendees from 50 countries participated in EMS World Expo. In addition to a trade show floor spanning 70,900 sq. ft., the 2017 exposition featured more than 360 exhibitors showcasing innovative products, services, and technologies to improve patient care, enhance provider safety, and increase operational efficiencies.

 

The 2018 EMS World Expo will take place October 29-November 2, in Nashville, Tennessee. For more information, visit emsworldexpo.com.

 

About EMS World Expo
As the largest EMS-dedicated event in the world, EMS World Expo, hosted in partnership with the National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians (NAEMT), annually attracts more than 5,700 EMS professionals. EMS World Expo sets the standard in EMS education, offering the training professionals need to do their jobs today, with the progressive curriculum and technology that provides the solutions for tomorrow.

 

About HMP
HMP is the force behind Healthcare Made Practical—and is a multichannel leader in healthcare events and education, with a mission to improve patient care. The company produces accredited medical education events and clinically relevant, evidence-based content for the global healthcare community across a range of therapeutic areas. Its brands include Consultant, the monthly, award-winning journal relied upon by primary care providers; Psych Congress, the largest independent mental health meeting in the U.S.; and the Symposium on Advanced Wound Care (SAWC), the largest wound care meeting in the world. For more information, visit hmpglobal.com.

Original post in PRWeb

Prevent and manage wounds with this expert, all-inclusive resource! Acute & Chronic WoundsCurrent Management Concepts, 5th Edition provides the latest diagnostic and treatment guidelines to help you provide quality care for patients with wounds. This textbook presents an interprofessional approach to maintaining skin integrity and managing the numerous types of skin damage including topics that range from the physiology of wound healing, general principles of wound management, vulnerable patient populations, management of percutaneous tubes, and specific care instructions to program development. Written by respected nursing educators Ruth Bryant and Denise Nix, this bestselling reference also provides excellent preparation for all wound certification exams.

 

  • A comprehensive approach to the care of patients with acute and chronic wounds guides students and health care providers to design, deliver and evaluate quality skin and wound care in a systematic fashion; the comprehensive approach includes the latest advances in diagnosis, differentiation of wound types, nutrition, prevention, treatment, and pharmacology.
  • Self-assessment questions and answers in each chapter help you assess your knowledge and prepare for all wound certification exams.
  • Checklists offer a concise, easy-to-read summary of the steps needed to achieve the best patient care outcomes.
  • Risk assessment scales help in determining a patient’s risk for developing a wound, and wound classification tools identify the proper terminology to be used in documentation.
  • Learning objectives at the beginning of each chapter focus your study on the most important content.
  • Principles for practice development boost outcomes and productivity in agencies and institutions, home care, acute care, long-term care, and long-term acute care settings.
  • NEW coverage includes the latest guidelines from WOCN, AAWC, NPUAP, EPUAP, and PPPIA, and the American College of Physicians.
  • New sections cover the prevention and management of biofilm, the new skin tear classification system, MASD and MARCI, CTP terminology and classification scheme, and integration of the Health Belief Model.
  • NEW! Additional full-color photographs show the differential diagnosis of types of skin damage, management of fistulas, and NPWT procedures.
  • NEW! Clinical Consult features help in applying concepts to clinical practice, showing students and health care professionals how to assess, manage, and document real-life patient and staff encounters using the ADPIE framework.
  • NEW two-color illustrations and design make the book more visually appealing.

Amit Jain’s Triple Assessment of Foot in Diabetes

A rapid screening tool

Diabetic foot is on the increase with prevalence rates of diabetes growing around the world. In spite of this, it is frequently a neglected entity in many countries. Screening of the diabetic foot serves to identify any underlying problem and helps one to immediately institute preventive and therapeutic measures. There are few screening tools currently used for diabetic foot. Amit Jain’s Triple Assessment of Diabetic Foot is a new, fast and easy screening tool from the Indian subcontinent that addresses the classic triad of the diabetic foot (neuropathy, ischemia, and infection) both specifically and effectively … read more

New technology for accelerated wound healing discovered

Researchers have found a new way of accelerating wound healing. The technology and the mode of action involves using lactic acid bacteria as vectors to produce and deliver a human chemokine on site in the wounds. The research group is the first in the world to have developed the concept for topical use and the technology could turn out to be disruptive to the field of biologic drugs … Researchers at Uppsala University and SLU have found a new way of accelerating wound healing. The technology and the mode of action method published in the highly ranked journal PNAS involves using lactic acid bacteria as vectors to produce and deliver a human chemokine on site in the wounds. The research group is the first in the world to have developed the concept for topical use and the technology could turn out to be disruptive to the field of biologic drugs … Treatment of large and chronic wounds are a high cost burden to the health care system since effective tools to accelerate healing are lacking. Wound care is today limited to mechanical debridement, use of different dressings and significant amounts of antibiotics preventing or treating wound infections. With the aging population, occurrence of chronic diseases such as diabetes and the alarming global spread of antibiotic resistance, a treatment that kick-starts and accelerates wound healing … read more

State of the Art Hydrogels for Wound Care and ….

State of the Art Hydrogels for Wound Care and Drug Delivery: Interview with CEO of Alliqua Inc.

Alliqua is a Langhorne, PA medical technology company that uses its proprietary hydrogel platform to develop wound care and drug delivery solutions. The company prides itself in having a broad range of wound care products that are not only different from competing products available on the market, but also in providing multiple options to clinicians to generate optimal wound healing outcomes with minimal risk of infections. Medgadget had the opportunity to interview David Johnson, CEO of Alliqua to learn about the latest products offered by the company and to get a better understanding of the next generation of wound care tools …. read more

 

Mölnlycke Partners With Tissue Analytics to Simplify Chronic Wound Care

WASHINGTON, Jan. 12, 2018 /PRNewswire/ –Mölnlycke, a world-leading medical solutions company, is pleased to announce a ground-breaking partnership with Tissue Analytics, a developer of a sophisticated digital wound imaging platforms. This exciting partnership brings together Mölnlycke’s outstanding expertise in wound care and Tissues Analytics’ advanced digital capabilities.

 

The two parties will jointly develop and commercialize innovative digital solutions for wound care practitioners including comprehensive clinical decision support tools that will significantly simplify and standardize wound assessment and treatment.

 

Today, practitioners are constrained by the quality of data available for wound assessment. Conditions, such as chronic wounds, burns and pressure ulcers are evaluated using only visual approximations.
read more 

Five benefits of wound education

 

As you know, the need for wound certification is growing at a rapid pace so there is no better time to prepare for the wound certification examination. The exam is challenging, but with the stimulating online interactive wound certification courses from WoundEducators.com, you will have all the tools you need to sail through the exam and begin enjoying the benefits of wound certification.

 

Some of the highlights and benefits of our program include:
  1. Self-paced, on-demand instruction.  Start and pause at any time.
  2. Interactive lessons that will keep you engaged and help you retain the information.
  3. Registration for a fraction of the cost of traditional seminar programs, while eliminating travel time, travel expenses and extensive absenteeism.
  4. All our courses are nationally recognized.  Every course in the WoundEducators.com portfolio has been subject to intensive and systematic review by major independent accreditation providers, and all courses have been formally approved for continuing education hours. In particular, our physician, podiatrist, and nurse courses are approved for CME, CE, and CPME credits in all states.
  5. Plus, WoundEducators.com offers a risk-free guarantee allowing you to retake the course until you pass the wound certification examination.
Register today to begin your journey to becoming an expert in the field of wound management while you secure your position and advance your career.

Where Are We With Point-Of-Care Testing For PAD In Patients With Diabetes?

How reliable are our screening tools for peripheral arterial disease (PAD)? A recently published meta-analysis suggests that while our current diagnostic testing measures are promising, one should be wary of relying upon any one tool in isolation in patients with diabetes.

In their 2020 study in the Journal of Vascular Surgery, Normahani and coworkers reviewed and analyzed studies to evaluate the accuracy of bedside testing for PAD in patients with diabetes.1 In examining the diagnostic accuracy of the ankle-brachial pressure index (ABPI), the toe brachial pressure index (TBPI) and the tibial waveform assessment, these authors reviewed 11 studies (including a total of 1,543 limbs) … read more

EWMA Podcasts Season 1

  • EP07: Personal protective equipment
    This podcast episode will provide you with a comprehensive overview of the prevention and management of skin injuries related to the use of personal protective equipment (PPE).This is a follow-up to the EWMA webinar we ran on the 30th April devoted to this topic. Due to a high volume of questions and level of interest that we have received during the webinar we have decided to follow-up with this podcast.  In this episode we will be answering some of the questions raised from the webinar.
  •  

  • EP06: Wound Care Essentials during COVID-19
    In this short special edition of the EWMA podcasts, Julie Jordan O’Brien talks about how to help wound care patients during COVID-19 and how a healthcare professional (HCP) can change a dressing in a home care setting.
  •  

  • EP05: AMS in Wound Management
    In this episode, Samantha Holloway, Chair of the EWMA Education Committee and Teacher Network, speaks to Karen Ousey, Professor of Skin Integrity and Director for the Institute of Skin Integrity and Infection Prevention at the University of Huddersfield, about antimicroabial stewardship in wound management.
  •  

  • EP04: Atypical Wounds
    In this episode, Samantha Holloway and Kirsi Isoherranen briefly discuss the best clinical practices and challenges related to the management of atypical wounds. By listening to this podcast you can learn more about how to suspect an atypical wound and will get more information about the diagnostic criteria and available tools
  •  

  • EP03: Person-centred Wound Care
    Georgina Gethin discusses with the podcast’s host, Julie Jordan O’Brien, what person-centred care is and why it is so important in wound management. By listening to this episode, you can learn more about the benefits of shared decision-making between the patient and clinicians in wound management and get some practical support in implementing it
  •  

  • EP02: Standardisation Wound Education in EU
    Samantha Holloway, Chair of the EWMA Education Committee and Teacher Network, speaks to Sebastian Probst and Ida Verheyen-Cronau about the standardisation of the wound education in Europe. Both podcast guests shares their experience in implementation of the EWMA level 5 and 6 post-registration curricula for nurses in Switzerland and Germany
  •  

  • EP01: Understanding Diabetic Foot
    In this episode of the EWMA podcasts, Julie Jordan O’Brien and David G. Armstrong discuss current challenges and opportunities in the management and prevention of diabetic foot ulcers. Jordan O’Brien is a former EWMA Council member who works as anadvanced nurse practitioner in plastic surgery at Beaumont Hospital, in Ireland. Armstrong is Professor of Surgery and Director of the Southwestern Academic Limb Salvage Alliance (SALSA) at the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California

2021 Prime Minister’s prize for improving the repair of human tissue, a beacon for wound research in Australia

The broad purpose of laboratory-based wound research is to obtain a scientific understanding of the mechanistic processes that underpin normal and abnormal wound healing. Translation of this knowledge can lead to the development of new tools, technologies, therapeutics diagnostics and sensors that ultimately will lead to improved wound management and patient care. While this process may seem far removed from the day-to-day challenge of dealing with patients with impaired healing, occasionally we see breakthroughs and achievements that encourage both researchers and clinicians alike … read more

New Guidelines For Addressing Nutrition Deficits In People With DFUs

Current estimates show that 37.3 million people, or 11.3 percent of the United States population, have diabetes.1 More than one-third of these patients will develop a diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) and recently published guidelines suggest that more than half of these patients have moderate or severe malnutrition.2

Recognizing the dearth of randomized controlled trials that specifically look at nutrition in people with DFUs as well as the challenges with nutrition adherence in this patient population, the authors of the new guidelines have emphasized practical screening and assessment tools, including key tips for physical exams, patient history and lab testing workups. The guidelines also provide an overview of dietary factors and nutrients, ranging from hydration and calorie intake … read more

Prevention or Delay of Type 2 Diabetes and Associated Comorbidities: Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes—2022

The American Diabetes Association (ADA) “Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes” includes the ADA’s current clinical practice recommendations and is intended to provide the components of diabetes care, general treatment goals and guidelines, and tools to evaluate quality of care. Members of the ADA Professional Practice Committee, a multidisciplinary expert committee (https://doi.org/10.2337/dc22-SPPC), are responsible for updating the Standards of Care annually, or more frequently as warranted. For a detailed description of ADA standards, statements, and reports, as well as the evidence-grading system for ADA’s clinical practice recommendations, please refer to the Standards of Care Introduction … read more

E-Learning and Blended-Learning Program in Wound Care for Undergraduate Nursing Students

To respond to the nursing shortage in the canton of Geneva, the School of Health Sciences increased the yearly number of Bachelor of Nursing students from 426 in 2016 to 497 in 2019 (HES-SO, 2020; 2021). In 2020, 190 students started, representing an increase of 18% since 2016. This increase had a major effect on the current face-to-face teaching methods, not only for the availability of lecturers, but also for the logistical resources. To face this problem, different virtual learning tools such as blended and e-learning were implemented. Blended learning is a combination of online learning and the traditional face-to-face learning (Siemens et al., 2015; Singh, 2003) using different technological approaches such as podcasts, lecture captures, or virtual web-based classrooms (Leidl et al., 2020), whereas e-learning is an online education method … read more

Fundamentals of pressure ulcer care

30 March 2022, 12.30 pm – 4.00 pm
Our (Society of Tissue Viability) educational sessions promote the best practices in skin health and wound healing.
It’s estimated that just under half a million people in the UK will develop at least one pressure ulcer in any given year. These wounds cause pain and suffering and impact significantly on a person’s quality of life. The financial impact to the NHS is approximately £2.2 billion a year and the costs of litigation is rising annually.

Education for both health and social care workers and patients is essential if this situation is to improve. This session will provide delegates with the fundamentals of pressure ulcer prevention and management using tools that can be applied in practice to help reduce pressure ulcers in their clinical areas.
Keynote Speaker: Sarah Gardner
read more


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The Importance of Standardization in Pressure Injury Risk Assessment

Pressure injuries are common among patients who experience extended exposure to pressure on a bony prominence or shear to areas of poor turgor, two factors that lead to constriction of a patient’s blood supply to the exposed area. A patient who is bedridden or has certain chronic conditions, such as diabetes,1 is more likely to develop a pressure injury. When mechanical force is imposed on the skin, it can result in poor blood flow and damage to the bone-muscle interface, thus making tissue sensitive and painful. For patients with limited mobility, this can be especially frustrating because they may not be able to adjust positions or medical equipment. If pressure injuries are left untreated or unnoticed, they can also become infected and even enter muscle and bone. Risk assessment tools are available to assess pressure injury risk and can work in tandem with practice standardization, thereby leading to effective treatment plans for practitioners and patients … read more


If you find WoundCareWeekly.com of value please consider a monthly donation to help cover expenses and keep this website going.

 

Australian Study Highlights Value of Tissue Analytics Wound Care Platform

Findings also confirm platform’s capabilities for wound and skin clinical trials

 

PITTSBURGH, April 18, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Net Health, a leading provider of software and analytics for medical specialties, announced the recent publication of a study reviewing the use of artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled mobile wound care applications developed by Net Health. The study showed that these applications provide better documentation, are easy to use, engage patients, and drive improvements in wound measurement and management.

 

Conducted by Australian New South Wales (NSW) Health Service, the study looked at the performance of Net Health’s Tissue Analytics’ wound imaging and analysis platform in multiple sites, including a senior care ward, colorectal ward, an outpatient dermatology clinic, and primary care physicians’ offices.

 

In addition to highlighting the platform’s value in clinical settings, the findings provide helpful insights for researchers looking to conduct decentralized and hybrid clinical trials involving wounds, skin lesions, and visible skin conditions in a post-pandemic world.

 

Statistically Significant Findings
The study was published in the International Wound Journal. The e-clinical platform was tested on 124 patients with 184 wounds compared with the standard care group, consisting of 166 patients with 243 wounds. Results showed several statistically significant outcomes related to use of the platform, including the completeness of documentation based on the number of dressing changes compared to standard care, pain, size, exudate, and odor (p < 0.001). These findings demonstrate the positive impact of the platform in terms of usability, patient adherence, and the photographic evidence of clinical endpoints.

 

As described in the publication, ten of the 13 participating physicians and nurses responded to a survey, and strongly agreed that the platform had value, and provided benefits to communication. The patients who were interviewed unanimously commented that the platform provided benefits to their wound healing and communication with clinicians.

 

Highlights Value for Clinical Research
Besides showcasing the value of mobile wound analysis in clinical settings, the findings will fuel interest in the Tissue Analytics platform for wound and skin care clinical research. Findings from the study that relate to clinical trials include the ability of the mobile wound analysis platform to: 1) empower patients to take more active roles in their care; 2) increase accuracy of wound measurements; and 3) ensure greater consistency in care and participant satisfaction.

 

Study results also suggest the value of the platform to retain study participants. Per interviews, patient-participants said they were “strongly” satisfied by the telehealth capability of the platform. Moreover, the study’s authors noted that using the app saved patients time and cost, especially for travel, a key factor in encouraging participants to remain in a study.

 

“We’re very excited by the findings in this study,” said Keith Tode, Vice President of Clinical Research for Tissue Analytics. “Study sponsors are looking for tools that are simple to use, engage patients, allow for virtual wound care visits and consultations, and provide real-time and real-world insights into the participant experience. This study shows that mobile wound platforms can offer the features today’s clinicians and researchers want and need. Looking ahead, we see many benefits to this approach for clinical trials for wound care, dermatology, endocrinology and other skin conditions.”

 

About Net Health
Net Health’s mission is to harness data for human health. Net Health solutions are trusted in over 23,000 facilities across the continuum of care. Our EHR software enables caregivers and their organizations to engage effectively with patients, streamline documentation, staff efficiently, secure maximum appropriate reimbursement and maintain regulatory compliance. Our unique approach to analytics seamlessly presents insights in clinical and operational workflows to improve care and business performance. Net Health is a portfolio company of The Carlyle Group, Level Equity and Silversmith Capital Partners. www.nethealth.com.

 

SOURCE Net Health Systems, Inc.

 

This article was originally published here
 

Biocomposites to present data on STIMULAN® and genex® at ECCMID 2022

Research findings from two studies demonstrate the antimicrobial effectiveness of STIMULAN® and genex®, when mixed with antibiotics

 

KEELE, England, April 12, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Biocomposites, an international medical devices company that engineers, manufactures and markets world leading products for use in infection management in bone and soft tissue, today announces the acceptance of two posters at the 32nd European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases (ECCMID) being held in Lisbon, Portugal on 23-26 April 2022. The company’s in-vitro research findings demonstrate the antimicrobial effectiveness of both STIMULAN® and genex® when mixed with antibiotics.

 

The first abstract demonstrates that STIMULAN® beads containing vancomycin and gentamicin were able to inhibit bacterial growth, when applied to tissue taken from diabetic foot infections, with zone of inhibition diameters ranging from 12-40mm.

 

The second abstract demonstrates the ability of genex® when mixed with combinations of vancomycin/gentamicin and vancomycin/tobramycin to prevent the formation of bacterial biofilms by MRSA, S. epidermidis and P. aeruginosa for up to 7 days on orthopaedic implant materials.

 

Both studies were co-authored by Julie Fletcher from the University of Exeter whom Biocomposites first funded in 2017 through the Daphne Jackson Trust, the UK’s leading organisation and independent registered charity dedicated to realising the potential of returners to research careers following a career break.

 

Dr Julie Fletcher, Research Fellow, The University of Exeter, said: “This research highlights the potential to use STIMULAN to achieve high local concentrations of antibiotic within poorly vascularised tissue to inhibit bacterial growth at a wound site, with the possibility of facilitating clearance of bacterial infection and improving wound outcomes. The genex research shows the potential to use genex as a carrier of antibiotics to prevent the formation of bacterial biofilm for up to 7 days on orthopaedic implants.”

 

Michael Harris, Chief Executive Officer of Biocomposites, added: “By presenting this new data at this important annual congress, we are pleased to further support the vital research being carried out by leading scientists. STIMULAN and genex are valuable tools for a surgeon and together help over 65,000 patients every year.”

 

STIMULAN® is the only calcium matrix antibiotic carrier approved to treat bacterial infection in surrounding soft tissue in Canada and for use in bone and soft tissue in EU, UK, and Saudi Arabia. STIMULAN® offers surgeons the flexibility to apply broad spectrum ‘off-the-shelf’ antibiotics at concentrations that will support their patient-specific treatment plans – dramatically improving patient outcomes and redefining standard of care.

 

genex is a biphasic composite of exceptional purity that is specifically formulated to balance osteoconductive scaffold strength and persistence in the body to enable the optimal remodelling of bone architecture.

 

About Biocomposites

Biocomposites is an international medical device company that engineers, manufactures and markets world leading products for use in infection management in bone and soft tissue. Based in Keele, UK, it has global operations across Europe, USA, Canada, China and India. Biocomposites is a world leader in the development of innovative calcium compounds for surgical use. Its products target a broad spectrum of infection risks across a variety of specialties, including musculoskeletal infection, orthopaedics, trauma, spine, foot and ankle and podiatry. Biocomposites products are now used in over 120,000 procedures per annum and sold in more than 40 countries around the world. Please visit biocomposites.com to learn more.

 

This article was originally published here

HMP Global launches Great Debates & Updates program focusing on Diabetic Foot Syndrome

HMP Global, the omnichannel leader in healthcare events and education, today announced the launch of a new program offering professionals who treat diabetic foot syndrome the opportunity to debate the most controversial topics in treatment options and gain knowledge from one another.

 

Great Debates & Updates in Diabetic Foot will be held December 2-3 in San Antonio, Texas. The unique, debate-style format will include dynamic presentations and interactive debates, while also diving into the long history of podiatry culture in San Antonio.

 

“The agenda will feature a mix of clinical updates and lively debates on provocative scientific topics impacting the field, including emerging concepts and treatment options for the diabetic foot,” said Dr. Lawrence A. Lavery, UT professor, board-certified podiatrist at UT Southwestern Medical Center, and event co-chairman. “We are excited to lead this inaugural event and provide a unique, interactive experience to the attendees, with several opportunities to network with faculty, industry, and colleagues.”

 

This year is the 50th anniversary of the podiatry residency program at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio, Lavery said, a milestone which will be celebrated at the GDU in Diabetic Foot event.

 

“There is a rich history of podiatry culture and diabetic foot research in Texas,” said Dr. Lee C. Rogers, event co-chairman and Chief of Podiatry and Associate Professor in the Department of Orthopedics at the University of Texas Health. “The Diabetic Foot Ulcer Classification System is a proven, effective, and widely used classification system for predicting hospitalization and lower extremity amputation. We look forward to discussing this, along with other important treatment tools and techniques, during the new program.”

 

GDU in Diabetic Foot is designed for the wide spectrum of medical professionals who diagnose and manage the diabetic foot, including podiatrists, wound care physicians, physical therapists, physicians-in-training, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants. The in-person meeting will allow attendees more opportunities for networking and engaging with colleagues and faculty experts.

 

“The GDU brand offers an educational experience unlike any other,” said Tiffney Oliver, Vice President, Wound Care Learning Network, HMP Education. “These unique, debate-style conferences provide a comprehensive learning experience covering the latest scientific updates and controversial issues emerging in different fields. We are excited to introduce the GDU brand through important education about managing and treating the diabetic foot.”

 

GDU in Diabetic Foot offers a maximum of 9 hours of continuing education credit. Exhibit space, attendee engagement options, and branding opportunities are available to organizations interested in participating in the event.

 

For more information or to register, visit gdudiabeticfoot.com.

 

About HMP Global
HMP Global is the force behind Healthcare Made Practical — and is an omnichannel leader in healthcare content, events, and education, with a mission to improve patient care. The company produces accredited medical education events — in person and online via its proprietary VRTX virtual platform — and clinically relevant, evidence-based content for the global healthcare community across a range of therapeutic areas. Its brands include the HMP Global Learning Network, healthcare’s most comprehensive source for news and information; Psych Congress, the largest independent mental health meeting in the U.S.; the Evolution of Psychotherapy, the world’s largest independent educational event for mental health professionals; the Leipzig Interventional Course (LINC), the leading, global gathering for interdisciplinary cardiovascular specialists; EMS World Expo, North America’s largest EMT and paramedic event; and the Symposium on Advanced Wound Care (SAWC), the largest wound care meeting in the world. For more information, visit hmpglobal.com.

Arizona-based biotech startup BioLab Sciences

     announces patent for regenerative tissue therapy, MyOwn Skin™

 

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz., Oct. 24, 2018 /PRNewswire/ — BioLab Sciences, an innovator in regenerative medicine technologies, today announced its exclusively licensed technology for MyOwn SkinTM, a painless, non-surgical procedure, which leverages a patient’s own skin to produce full-thickness skin grafts in 5-7 days.

MyOwn SkinTM is a revolutionary approach that uses a patient’s own skin to accelerate healing of chronic wounds, burns, diabetic foot ulcers and other difficult-to-heal wounds. By utilizing a small skin sample, this regenerative approach allows the body to heal itself and is less likely to face infection or rejection.

“In the United States alone, chronic wounds affect 6.5 million patients,” said Bob Maguire, BioLab Sciences CEO. “Our advanced, tissue-biomanufacturing approach offers a viable, effective solution for skin regeneration and repair. This innovative strategy has shown to accelerate the healing of damaged soft tissue and improve wound-care outcomes.”

This autologous strategy to wound care is non-invasive, improves recovery time, and eliminates potential rejection. BioLab’s impressive portfolio of regenerative products includes its amnion-derived fluid products, Fluid FlowTM and Amnio RestoreTM and its amniotic allograft membrane product Membrane PatchTM, an amnion membrane allograft composed of a connective tissue matrix that regenerates soft tissue while inhibiting inflammation and scarring. BioLab Sciences also offers a comprehensive wound care kit that provides physicians with the necessary tools to help patients recover quickly from diabetic ulcers, burns and other traumatic external wounds, as well as its Amnio Breathe Nebulizer bundled package designed to deliver a topical treatment directly onto a patient’s respiratory system …

View original content to download multimedia: http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/arizona-based-biotech-startup-biolab-sciences-announces-patent-for-regenerative-tissue-therapy-myown-skin-300736690.html

Healogics aims to educate the community during wound care awareness week

JACKSONVILLE, Fla., June 1, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Healogics® the nation’s leading provider of world-class wound care, is helping raise awareness of the risks of chronic wounds during the ninth annual Wound Care Awareness Week, June 6-10.

 

Healogics established Wound Care Awareness Month in 2014 to bring attention to the growing need for wound care and the nearly 7 million Americans currently living with chronic wounds. Leaders across the nation are dedicating the entire week to educating physicians, patients and the general public about the prevalence of chronic wounds and the advanced wound care solutions that are available.

 

The incidence of chronic wounds is rising due to our aging population and increasing rates of disease. Various conditions like diabetes, PAD, cardiovascular disease, COPD, and obesity increase the likelihood of a person having a chronic wound. The most common wounds that Americans experience include:

  • Pressure Ulcers (43%)
  • Diabetic Foot Ulcers (31%)
  • Venous Stasis Ulcers (12%)
  • Surgical Wounds or Trauma (8%)
  • Arterial Ulcers (6%)

 

If left untreated, chronic wounds contribute to a diminished quality of life and can lead to complications, such as infection, hospitalization, and even amputation of the affected limb. Even more alarming, more than half of people die within five years of amputation.

 

The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have brought the amputation risk to the forefront, as many suffering from chronic wounds have not sought needed care during the past two years. The result has been a steep rise in amputations, according to a study from the American Diabetes Association.

 

“The rising rate of amputation continues to drive our education efforts in the community. Wound Care Awareness Month is an opportunity to come together with new resources, tools and educational materials with the goal to improve access to wound care for all who need it,” said David Bassin, Chief Executive Officer.

 

With this in mind, now is the perfect time for those suffering from chronic wounds to seek advanced wound care available at a Healogics Wound Care Center®.

 

“Wound Care Centers continue providing the necessary and important care that patients need through COVID-19. It’s imperative we continue educating the community about the advanced therapies for patients suffering from chronic wounds,” said William Ennis, D.O., Chief Medical Officer. “I celebrate Wound Awareness Week in my community, and I applaud my fellow colleagues who continue to change the lives of the patients we serve.”

 

Visit www.woundcareawareness.com to learn more about Wound Care Awareness Week and hear from patients about how wound healing changed their lives.

 

ABOUT HEALOGICS
Headquartered in Jacksonville, Fla., Healogics, LLC is the nation’s wound healing expert. Last year over 300,000 patients received advanced wound care through a network of over 600 Wound Care Centers. Healogics also partners with over 300 skilled nursing facilities to care for patients with chronic wounds and provides inpatient consults at more than 60 partner hospitals. As the industry leader, Healogics has the largest repository of chronic wound-specific patient data in the country. The Healogics Wound Science Initiative offers peer-reviewed research and advanced analytics in the pursuit of not only better outcomes, but a better way to provide care.

 

This article was originally published here

debritom+ by Medaxis: A New Treatment Method Shows Promise In Wound Healing

PLANO, Texas, June 6, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Non-healing diabetic foot wounds are increasing in prevalence, and create a higher risk for infection, osteomyelitis and amputation. To facilitate appropriate wound healing processes, proper debridement of the wound bed is critical to remove non-viable tissue and bacterial biofilm. Traditional debridement methods involve the use of a sharp blade, a method that often results in the removal of healthy, viable tissue and pain for the patient. In contrast, the Swiss wound care company, Medaxis has developed the debritom+ to precisely clean acute and chronic wounds in a tissue-preserving manner. By using Micro Water Jet technology, the debritom+ removes the unhealthy tissue such as fibrin, necrosis, and biofilm efficiently while performing a precise mechanical cleaning and stimulation of the wound base to enhance granulation and healing.

 

Results from the interim analysis of a Multicenter Randomized Control Trial (NCT04564443) that has been accepted for presentation this week at the American Diabetes Association annual meeting in New Orleans, showed that weekly debridement using the debritom+ nearly doubled the rate of wound healing from 40% to 72% compared to the use of traditional methods. Also shown was a significant improvement in wound size reduction (87% versus 35%), while also reducing the frequency of infections and complications.

 

Study Chair, Professor David Armstrong DPM MD PhD of Keck School of Medicine of University of Southern California noted “The early data suggests great promise that better debridement tools can improve wound closure and decrease diabetic foot related complications and infections. This study supports that improved debridement methods, combined with good quality dressings and offloading, is beneficial and possibly synergistic to achieve wound healing in non-healing diabetic foot ulcers.”

 

“To initiate wound healing, a quality debridement is key to success. In contrast to traditional debridement methods that remove both the non-viable and healthy tissue, the debritom+ by Medaxis removes only the non-viable tissue while preserving the healthy tissue underneath. By creating microbleeding and providing the oxygenation to the wound that is necessary for starting the healing process, the debritom+ has now been proven to initiate healing in nearly twice as many wounds as with traditional methods with six-times fewer infections and complications” stated Dr. Mark Cregan, Managing Director of Medaxis USA.

 

Beat Moser, CEO of Medaxis said “These results validate the design philosophy of the Medaxis debritom+. The use of our patented Micro Water Jet Technology has now been proven to significantly improve wound healing outcomes. I have always believed that clean wounds heal better, and now we have the hard evidence.”

 

To view the study results, or for more information about the debritom+ by Medaxis, please see www.medaxis.us, email info@medaxis.us, or call (312) 483-6214

 

SOURCE Medaxis LLC

 

This article was originally published here

Non-Cytotoxic Wound Cleansers: What Should I Use?

Why Do Chronic Wounds Contain Biofilm?
The process of wound healing ideally progresses from inflammation to epithelialization and, finally, remodeling. If at any point bacterial (or fungal) colonization becomes prominent, the process of wound healing is disrupted. The creation of biofilm is a microbial defense mechanism that stalls the trajectory of healthy wound healing and can contribute to the development of a chronic wound. It is estimated that 90% of chronic wounds and 6% of acute wounds contain biofilms generated by microbes.1,2 Epidemiologically, chronic wounds impact 2% of the entire US population.2 Because of this large impact, knowledge of proper wound healing and use of clinical tools to assist the wound healing process are essential … read more

FDA 510(k) Clearance Expands Labelling of MolecuLight i:X® to Include the Ability

to Identify Regions Containing Elevated Load and More Bacterial Species

 

New FDA Clearance Illustrates the Utility of the i:X to Reliably Detect
Clinically Significant Bacteria that Impedes Wound Healing

 

TORONTO, June 29, 2022 /PRNewswire/ – MolecuLight Inc., the leader in point-of-care fluorescence imaging for real-time detection of wounds containing elevated bacterial loads, announces that it has received an expansion to its FDA 510(k) clearance for the MolecuLight i:X® imaging device’s ability to detect the location of elevated bacterial loads (>104 CFU/g) in wounds. The expanded labelling also includes the device’s ability to identify areas of wounds containing more bacterial species, including key target pathogens of interest to the CDC that are major causes of antimicrobial resistance1. Detectable species include gram-negative and gram-positive species, aerobes and anaerobes. This expanded labeling is based on a detailed retrospective statistical analysis of over 350 patients.

 

Targeted debridement of wound using the MolecuLight point-of-care imaging device for detection of elevated bacterial burden (CNW Group/MolecuLight)

 

“We are thrilled with the FDA’s new clearance for MolecuLight’ ability to determine the location of elevated bacterial loads in wounds, in addition to the ability to identify regions with more bacterial species of interest”, says Anil Amlani, MolecuLight’s CEO. “Clinicians worldwide are using the MolecuLight device to visualize regions with clinically significant bacterial loads and more species of concern. With point-of-care information on bacterial load and its locations through use of a MolecuLight device, clinicians can act immediately to tailor their cleaning, debridement, antimicrobial strategies and treatments accordingly.”

 

This video (courtesy of Rose Raizman) illustrates the importance of visualizing the location of elevated bacterial load in a wound. In this scenario, the clinician is using MolecuLight i:X to inform their decision-making and target their wound hygiene to the areas of red fluorescence. Regions of red, indicating that the wound contains clinically significant (>104 CFU/g) levels of bacterial burden, are clearly visible on the patient’s diabetic foot ulcer (see image).

 

In addition, the FDA has also recognized MolecuLight’s ability to visualize regions containing troublesome bacterial species at the point-of-care. The MolecuLight device can be used to enable fluorescence-guided tissue biopsies to these regions to detect a higher number of pathogens of interest (defined by the CDC as increasing risk to develop antibiotic resistance) compared to standard-of-care-guided biopsies. The CDC has identified antibiotic resistance as “one of the greatest global public health challenges of our time”1. Strategies to combat antibiotic resistance include containing emerging threats through early detection and aggressive response and improving appropriate antibiotic use through antimicrobial stewardship programs. The expanded use of diagnostic tools, like MolecuLight, to improve accuracy and speed of pathogen detection has been called out to help improve appropriate antibiotic selection and reduce unnecessary antibiotic use1.

 

MolecuLight was the first to receive FDA de novo clearance for its MolecuLight i:X imaging platform and has subsequently received three additional FDA 510(k) clearances for the device.

 

About MolecuLight Inc.
MolecuLight Inc. is a privately-owned medical imaging company that has developed and is commercializing its proprietary fluorescent imaging platform technology in multiple clinical markets. MolecuLight’s suite of commercially released devices, including the MolecuLight i:X® and DX™ fluorescence imaging systems and their accessories, provide point-of-care handheld imaging devices for the global wound care market for the real-time detection and localization of elevated bacterial load in wounds and for digital wound measurement. MolecuLight procedures performed in the United States can benefit from an available reimbursement pathway including two CPT® codes for physician work to perform “fluorescence imaging for bacterial presence, location, and load” and facility payment for Hospital Outpatient Department (HOPD) and Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) settings through an Ambulatory Payment Classification (APC) assignment. The company is also commercializing its unique fluorescence imaging platform technology for other markets with globally relevant unmet needs including food safety, consumer cosmetics and other key industrial markets.

 

www.moleculight.com

 

Image: Download at: https://moleculight.box.com/s/ax8758gz0f8amouhcjjvs4xzkfa9vofo
Video: https://youtu.be/HKOCGBlIQj4

 

SOURCE MolecuLight

 

 

Resources

…clinicians and facilities with the necessary tools in the form of education, consultation, and hands-on training to best serve the needs of their patients and improve those outcomes We are…

MolecuLight Featured in Vizient Tech Watch as Key Technology for Visualizing Bacterial Burden

and Helping to Reduce Surgical Site Infections

 

Article is a Follow-On to MolecuLight’s Receipt an Innovative Technology Contract from Vizient Last Year

 

PITTSBURGH, Dec. 6, 2022 /PRNewswire/ – MolecuLight Corp., the leader in point-of-care fluorescence imaging for detection of wounds containing elevated bacterial loads, is featured in Vizient’s newly released Tech Watch publication as a key technology for visualizing bacterial load and its locations, and helping to reduce surgical site infections. The article, “Fluorescence Imaging: New technology enables point-of-care surgical wound bacterial assessment” is featured in Vizient’s Tech Watch (Medical Device) Volume 3 issue, issued this past week.

 

MolecuLightDX™ point-of-care Imaging device to detect elevated bacterial loads in wounds to help clinicians prevent surgical site complications. (CNW Group/MolecuLight)

MolecuLightDX™ point-of-care Imaging device to detect elevated bacterial loads in wounds to help clinicians prevent surgical site complications. (CNW Group/MolecuLight)

The Tech Watch article describes how surgical site infections (SSIs) occur in up to 38% of surgeries1 (depending on anatomical location and type of surgery) and account for 20% of all healthcare-acquired infections2. SSIs are also the costliest of these infections, extending the average length of hospital stays by 9.7 days and costing more than $20,000 per patient admission3,4.

 

Early and accurate diagnosis of post-surgical bacterial loads and infection is critical to enable prompt treatment before the infection worsens. Some cases require lab testing to accurately diagnose the bacteria colonizing the wound, allowing the offending bacteria to grow and spread and delay effective treatments. Test results can take days to weeks to be available and, if positive, could be too late to prevent infection.

 

Clinicians need real-time diagnostic tools that they can use at the point-of-care to help provide immediate information on the state of the wound and possible growth of bacterial burden. The article argues that MolecuLight imaging helps eliminate unnecessary subjectivity in assessing wounds for the presence of harmful bacteria by allowing quick and accurate visualization of locations of elevated bacteria load in wounds, along with clinical signs and symptoms. As such, it provides “invaluable real-time information to inform clinical decision-making”.

 

A recent per-reviewed study5 supports this position in demonstrating the benefits of using MolecuLight to help clinician visualize bacterial burden in surgical site wounds:

  • 76% of surgical sites in the study that reach the stage of referral to a wound specialist had clinically significant bacterial loads (104 to 109 CFU/g), however only 6.8% exhibited symptoms of infection, resulting in delayed infection management.

  • Point-of-care fluorescence imaging (using the MolecuLight i:X device) for detecting high bacterial loads improved sensitivity by 5.7-fold compared to clinical signs and symptoms alone.

  • Clinician experience with fluorescence imaging and interpretation (>200 imaging sessions) increased sensitivity of fluorescence imaging to 11.3-fold higher than clinical signs and symptoms alone, and accuracy to 2.6-fold higher.

 

“Clinicians need an objective means of detecting infection or another surgical wound complication without having to rely on subjective judgment,” says Kylie Sandy-Hodgetts, PhD, Founder and inaugural President of the International Surgical Wound Complications Advisory Panel (ISWCAP).

 

“Fluorescence imaging using MolecuLight is positioned to change contemporary paradigms of post-surgical wound management due to its ability to quickly and reliably detect bacterial burden and visualize contamination at the point-of-care”.

 

In addition to the profile in Vizent’s Tech Watch, last year the MolecuLight i:X® fluorescence wound imaging device received an Innovative Technology contract from Vizient, Inc., the nations’ largest member-driven health care performance improvement company. The new Innovative Technology contract for MolecuLight i:X signifies to Vizient members the device’s unique qualities that potentially bring improvement to the health care industry.

 

“We have been working with MolecuLight since 2021 when Vizient recognized the company as an awarded supplier through our Innovative Technology Program,” said Tami Maurer, VP, Contract & Program Services at Vizient, Inc. “Carefully evaluated and selected by our member council of clinical and supply chain professionals, Vizient’s Innovative Technology Program recognizes innovative advancements in care, enabling healthcare providers to offer the highest quality care while encouraging manufacturers to continue to pioneer new solutions.”

 

The MolecuLight i:X and DX are the only imaging devices for the real-time detection of elevated bacterial burden in wounds that are FDA cleared and CE and Health Canada approved. With clinical evidence including over 60 peer-reviewed publications involving 1,500 patients, they are used by leading wound care facilities globally.

 

About MolecuLight Corp.

MolecuLight Corp. is the US subsidiary of MolecuLight Inc., a privately-owned medical imaging company that has developed and is commercializing its proprietary fluorescent imaging platform technology in multiple clinical markets. MolecuLight ‘s suite of commercial devices, which include the MolecuLight i:X® and DX™ fluorescence imaging systems and their accessories, are point-of-care handheld imaging devices for the real-time detection and localization of bacterial load in wounds and digital wound measurement. MolecuLight procedures performed in the United States benefit from an available reimbursement pathway which includes two CPT® codes for physician work to perform “fluorescence imaging for bacterial presence, location, and load” and facility payment for Hospital Outpatient Department (HOPD) and Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) settings through an Ambulatory Payment Classification (APC) assignment. The company is also commercializing its unique fluorescence imaging platform technology for other global markets with relevant unmet needs in food safety, consumer cosmetics and other key industrial markets.

 

This article was originally published here

Seasoned Healthcare Executive David Bassin Joins the MolecuLight Board of Directors

Former Healogics CEO Brings Deep Wound Care Industry Experience to MolecuLight’s
Rapidly Growing Business

TORONTOJuly 6, 2023 /PRNewswire/ – MolecuLight Inc., the leader in point-of-care fluorescence imaging that locates and detects elevated, pathogenic bacterial loads in and around wounds, is pleased to announce the appointment of David Bassin to its Board of Directors as an Independent Board Member.

David Bassin brings a wealth of expertise and experience in the healthcare industry, particularly in the field of wound care. As the founder of GIO Advisory LLC, he has provided invaluable advisory services to numerous companies and private equity firms based on his extensive background in healthcare, spanning pharmaceutical/device, payer, and provider services. Most recently, Bassin served as the CEO of Healogics, the foremost provider of wound care services in the US, operating over 630 wound care centers and 300 providers. During his tenure, he successfully restructured and refocused the business, resulting in strong earnings growth prior to his transition into advisory services. Prior to his role as CEO, Bassin served as the CFO of Healogics, contributing to the company’s financial growth and success. Bassin’s impressive career also includes significant roles in other healthcare organizations. He served as the CFO of eviCore Healthcare, Inc., where he oversaw multiple dividend recapitalizations and facilitated a merger with the company’s largest competitor, leading to the creation of a company with over 3,000 employees. Additionally, Bassin held the position of CFO at InVentiv Health, Inc., a provider of services to pharmaceutical companies, where he successfully managed a high-growth company and orchestrated a go-private transaction valued at over $1 billion and delivered a significant premium to its shareholders.

“We are thrilled to welcome David Bassin to the MolecuLight Board of Directors,” said Anil Amlani, CEO of MolecuLight. “His extensive experience in optimizing and scaling organizations across the healthcare industry, particularly in wound care, will be invaluable to MolecuLight as we continue to expand our global presence. Our MolecuLight devices have already become indispensable tools in wound assessment and real-time decision-making for thousands of clinicians worldwide. David’s expertise will greatly support our mission to meet the increasing global demand for our innovative wound care diagnostics and establish them as the gold standard in the field.”

David Bassin expressed his excitement about joining MolecuLight’s Board of Directors, stating, “There are over 6.5 million patients living with wounds.  As an industry, we need to continue to develop new solutions that improve wound care treatment effectiveness and efficiency.  With a global drive to improve outcomes, reduce costs, and minimize antibiotic usage, MolecuLight’s point-of-care devices have demonstrated their ability to effectively address these critical clinical needs. I am deeply impressed by the organization, the technology’s alignment with market demands, and the significant market traction they have achieved. I am eager to contribute to their growth and help them achieve their ambitious goals.”

MolecuLight’s groundbreaking i:X® and DX™ imaging devices are the only FDA-cleared and CE and Health Canada approved devices for the real-time detection of elevated bacterial burden in wounds. Supported by over 80 peer-reviewed publications involving 2,600 patients, these devices are widely utilized by leading wound care facilities worldwide.

About MolecuLight Inc.

MolecuLight Inc. is a privately-owned medical imaging company that has developed and is commercializing its proprietary fluorescent imaging platform technology in multiple clinical markets. MolecuLight’s commercial devices, which include the MolecuLight i: and DX™ fluorescence imaging systems and their accessories, are point-of-care handheld imaging devices for the real-time detection and localization of bacterial load in wounds and digital wound measurement. MolecuLight procedures performed in the United States benefit from an available reimbursement pathway which includes two CPT® codes for physician work to perform “fluorescence imaging for bacterial presence, location, and load” and facility payment for Hospital Outpatient Department (HOPD) and Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) settings through an Ambulatory Payment Classification (APC) assignment. The company is also commercializing its unique fluorescence imaging platform technology for other global markets with relevant unmet needs in food safety, consumer cosmetics and other key industrial markets.

For more information, contact:

Rob Sandler 
Chief Marketing Officer
MolecuLight Inc.
T. +1.647.362.4684
rsandler@moleculight.com
www.moleculight.com

Image:

SOURCE MolecuLight

Innovative Therapeutic Strategies for Managing DFUs

Call for Submissions: Innovative Therapeutic Strategies for Managing Diabetic Foot Ulcers

Frontiers in Medicine is currently accepting submissions for its ongoing research topic, “Innovative Therapeutic Strategies for Managing Diabetic Foot Ulcers and Mitigating Associated Complications.” This initiative aims to spotlight cutting-edge clinical and translational research in the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) and related conditions.

The editors are seeking contributions in the following areas:

  • Novel pharmacological and regenerative therapies, including cell-based and platelet-rich plasma approaches
  • Biomaterials, hydrogels, and advanced wound dressings that promote healing
  • Machine learning and AI-driven tools for DFU diagnosis and care planning
  • Studies on microbial spectra and antibiotic resistance in diabetic foot infections
  • Real-world implementation of wearable and remote monitoring technologies

This cross-disciplinary topic is open to original research, systematic reviews, clinical trials, case reports, and perspectives from experts in podiatry, wound care, infectious disease, endocrinology, and rehabilitation.

The editorial team includes Andrés González-Cortés (Mexico), Gianluca Sapino (Italy), and Katarzyna T. Targonska (Poland). Researchers interested in contributing can find full submission details and deadlines on the Frontiers website.

Submissions are peer-reviewed and published on a rolling basis. Early contributions will shape the future direction of diabetic foot care research globally.

Keywords:
Call for submissions,
Diabetic foot ulcers,
Innovative therapies,
Machine learning in healthcare,
Cell therapy,
Andrés González-Cortés,
Gianluca Sapino,
Katarzyna T. Targonska

Optimizing Diabetic Foot Ulcer Care: Four Steps to Save Limbs Worldwide

Optimizing Diabetic Foot Ulcer Care: Four Steps to Save Limbs Worldwide

Keck Medicine of USC outlines a comprehensive, four-step approach to diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) management, aiming to reduce the global incidence of lower-limb amputations. This strategy emphasizes early detection, interdisciplinary care, and patient empowerment to enhance outcomes for individuals with diabetes.

1. Establishing a “Hot Foot Line”: A dedicated hotline facilitates rapid triage of patients presenting with diabetic foot infections or ischemia, ensuring immediate assessment by a specialized limb-salvage team. This prompt intervention can significantly decrease the risk of major amputations.

2. Developing Wound-Healing Clinics: Specialized outpatient clinics focus on active tissue loss, employing advanced modalities such as total contact casting, vascular diagnostics, and surgical debridement. These clinics aim to expedite healing and reduce hospitalization rates.

3. Establishing Remission Clinics: Post-healing, remission clinics work to prevent ulcer recurrence through patient education, biomechanical evaluations, and preventive interventions. Tools like pressure-relieving footwear and thermal monitoring devices are utilized to maintain ulcer-free periods.

4. Implementing Screening Clinics: Annual foot screenings assess risk factors like neuropathy and peripheral artery disease. Early identification allows for timely referrals to appropriate care pathways, including remission or wound-healing clinics, thereby preventing the progression to limb-threatening conditions.

This model has demonstrated success at Keck Medicine of USC and is adaptable to various healthcare settings globally. By integrating these steps, healthcare systems can proactively manage chronic conditions, ultimately saving limbs and improving quality of life for patients with diabetes.

Read the full article on the Keck Medicine of USC website.

Keywords:
Diabetic foot ulcers,
Foot ulcer care,
Limb salvage,
Amputation prevention,
Keck Medicine of USC,
David G. Armstrong

Advanced Wound Care Summit USA 2025: Uniting Industry Leaders

Advanced Wound Care Summit USA 2025: Uniting Industry Leaders

The Advanced Wound Care Summit USA, scheduled for July 15-16, 2025, in Boston, is a premier industry-led forum bringing together wound care experts to drive innovation and collaboration. This event focuses on strategic partnerships, cutting-edge research, and overcoming key challenges in wound care product development.

Key Highlights:

  • Innovative Solutions: Explore novel clinical trial designs and next-generation diagnostic tools to advance wound care technologies.
  • Reimbursement Challenges: Address barriers to skin substitute product adoption through improved reimbursement models.
  • Networking Opportunities: Connect with C-level executives, R&D directors, and investors to foster partnerships and growth.
  • Expert Insights: Hear from leading figures like Dr. Thomas Serena and Dr. David G. Armstrong on biomaterials, personalized medicine, and regulatory strategies.

This summit is a must-attend for wound care professionals seeking to shape the future of patient care through innovation and collaboration.

Learn more and register at the Advanced Wound Care Summit USA website.

Keywords:
Wound care innovation,
Clinical trials,
Reimbursement models,
Personalized medicine,
Thomas Serena,
David G. Armstrong

Blisters and Bullous Disease: Is It Infection or Inflammation?

Blisters and Bullous Disease: Infection or Autoimmune?

A recent article in Advances in Skin & Wound Care explores the diagnostic challenges of distinguishing between infectious and autoimmune blistering skin conditions. The piece emphasizes the importance of accurate diagnosis, as treatment strategies differ significantly between bacterial infections like impetigo and autoimmune diseases such as pemphigus vulgaris. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}

Key Highlights:

  • Infectious Blisters: Impetigo, a common superficial bacterial infection, can present with bullous or nonbullous lesions. Bullous impetigo is typically caused by toxin-producing Staphylococcus aureus and manifests as deeper, larger blisters. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}
  • Autoimmune Blisters: Pemphigus vulgaris (PV) is a severe autoimmune blistering disease characterized by fragile, flaccid blisters that often begin in the oral mucosa. Early diagnosis and treatment with high-dose corticosteroids and immunosuppressants are crucial to reduce mortality rates. :contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}
  • Diagnostic Approach: Differentiating between infectious and autoimmune causes involves clinical assessment, histological examination, and immunofluorescent studies to detect specific autoantibodies. :contentReference[oaicite:14]{index=14}

Understanding the underlying cause of blistering skin conditions is essential for effective management. Clinicians should maintain a high index of suspicion and utilize appropriate diagnostic tools to distinguish between infectious and autoimmune etiologies.

Read the full article on the Advances in Skin & Wound Care website.

Keywords:
blisters,
pemphigus vulgaris,
impetigo

Improving Patient Outcomes With Integral Debridement

Improving Patient Outcomes With Integral Debridement

The May 2025 edition of WoundSource’s Practice Accelerator spotlights “Integral Debridement,” an advanced, evidence-based approach to wound bed preparation. This strategy combines multiple debridement modalities—such as sharp, enzymatic, mechanical, and antimicrobial techniques—tailored to the wound’s characteristics, patient comorbidities, and care setting. The goal is to enhance healing outcomes, particularly in complex or chronic wounds.

Key Highlights:

  • Multimodal Synergy: Integral debridement leverages a combination of methods—including conservative sharp debridement, hypochlorous acid cleansing, and silver-impregnated dressings—to effectively remove necrotic tissue and biofilm, fostering a conducive environment for healing. :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}
  • Continuity Across Care Settings: This approach ensures consistent wound management throughout various care environments, from inpatient to home care, by employing tools like UrgoClean Ag dressings and Vashe® hypochlorous acid soaks that maintain debridement effects between clinical visits.
  • Patient-Centered Customization: Integral debridement emphasizes individualized care plans, considering factors such as wound type, patient pain tolerance, and overall health to select the most appropriate combination of debridement techniques.

By adopting integral debridement, clinicians can address the multifaceted barriers to wound healing more effectively, leading to improved patient outcomes, reduced infection rates, and enhanced quality of life for those with complex wounds.

Read the full article on the WoundSource website.

Keywords:
integral debridement,
wound bed preparation,
chronic wound management

Columbia VA podiatrist recognized for diabetes-related amputation research

Columbia VA Podiatrist Recognized for Research on Emotional Impact of Diabetic Amputations

Dr. Brandon Brooks, a podiatrist at the Columbia VA Health Care System, received first place honors at the 10th Annual Conference of the American Society of Podiatric Surgeons for his innovative research on the psychological burden of diabetes-related amputations. His study introduces the concept of DREADD—Diabetes-Related Extremity Amputation Depression & Distress—to better understand the emotional trauma experienced by patients undergoing even minor amputations.

Key Highlights:

  • DREADD Framework: Dr. Brooks coined the acronym to emphasize that minor, non-traumatic amputations—such as toe removal—can lead to serious emotional consequences, including depression, anxiety, and treatment noncompliance.
  • Impact on Patient Behavior: The study found that approximately 90% of patients reported increased emotional distress after minor amputations, which contributed to poorer disease management, such as missed appointments and medication lapses.
  • Call for Integrated Care: Dr. Brooks advocates for integrating behavioral health into limb preservation teams and utilizing tools like the PHQ-9 to screen for depressive symptoms during podiatric care.

This research adds an important dimension to limb preservation, stressing that successful outcomes require attention not only to physical recovery but also to emotional well-being. Dr. Brooks collaborated on the study with his brother, Dr. Bradley Brooks, a board-certified psychiatrist, highlighting the value of interdisciplinary teamwork in advancing diabetic foot care.

Read the full article on the VA News website.

Keywords:
diabetes-related amputations,
psychological distress,
limb preservation,
Brandon Brooks,
Bradley Brooks

The Human Body Is Designed to Walk: Insights from Linda Rusiecki, DPT

The Human Body Is Designed to Walk: Insights from Linda Rusiecki, DPT

In her article, “The Human Body Is Designed to Walk: It Thrives When It Walks”, Linda Rusiecki, DPT, Inpatient Rehabilitation Educator at Corewell Health, emphasizes the fundamental role of walking in human health and the importance of mobility aids in supporting this function. She underscores that walking is not only essential for physical well-being but also for psychological and emotional health.

Key Highlights:

  • Evolutionary Perspective: Rusiecki discusses how the human body has evolved to walk upright, making walking a natural and necessary activity for maintaining health.
  • Health Benefits: Regular walking contributes to improved cardiovascular health, enhanced mood, better balance, and increased independence, especially in older adults.
  • Role of Mobility Aids: For individuals facing mobility challenges, appropriate aids such as walkers, canes, or prosthetics can facilitate walking, thereby promoting autonomy and quality of life.
  • Rehabilitation Focus: In rehabilitation settings, encouraging walking with or without aids is a primary goal to restore function and prevent complications associated with immobility.

Rusiecki’s insights highlight the intrinsic link between walking and overall health, advocating for the use of mobility aids as tools to enhance movement and independence. Her perspective serves as a reminder of the importance of maintaining mobility throughout all stages of life.

Read the full article on the Medical Tech Outlook website.

Keywords:
walking,
mobility aids,
rehabilitation,
Linda Rusiecki,
Corewell Health

Embracing the Pain: What Stoicism, Residency, and Running Teach Us About Resilience

Sole Purpose 61: Embracing the Pain—Lessons in Resilience from Stoicism, Residency, and Running

In the latest installment of the Sole Purpose series, Dr. Santiago delves into the intertwined themes of physical and mental endurance, drawing parallels between the rigors of medical residency, the discipline of long-distance running, and the philosophical tenets of Stoicism. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}:contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}

Key Highlights:

  • Stoic Philosophy in Medicine: Dr. Santiago explores how Stoic principles—such as embracing discomfort, focusing on what can be controlled, and maintaining equanimity—can serve as valuable tools for medical professionals facing the challenges of residency and clinical practice.
  • Running as a Metaphor: The article draws comparisons between the perseverance required in long-distance running and the resilience needed in the medical field, emphasizing the importance of mental fortitude and consistent effort.
  • Personal Narratives: Through candid reflections, Dr. Santiago shares personal experiences of navigating the physical and emotional demands of medical training, highlighting the growth that emerges from confronting and embracing pain.

This piece offers a compelling perspective on the cultivation of resilience, suggesting that the challenges faced in both medicine and athletics can be opportunities for personal development when approached with a Stoic mindset.:contentReference[oaicite:12]{index=12}

Read the full article on the PRESENT Podiatry website.

Keywords:
Stoicism,
medical residency,
running,
resilience,
Dr. Santiago

TWC Is Evolving to the Wound Care Business Navigator

Today’s Wound Clinic Evolves into Wound Care Business Navigator

After 18 years of serving the wound care community, Today’s Wound Clinic (TWC) is transitioning into the Wound Care Business Navigator (WCBN), a dynamic digital platform designed to meet the evolving needs of modern wound care professionals. This change reflects the growing demand for comprehensive, real-time resources that address the complexities of reimbursement, compliance, and operational efficiency in wound care practice. Read the full article.

Key Highlights:

  • Purpose-Driven Transition: WCBN is designed to provide clinicians with immediate access to expert insights, regulatory updates, and practical tools to navigate the complexities of wound care business operations.
  • Interactive and Adaptive Platform: Unlike traditional publications, WCBN offers a continuously updated, interactive experience that evolves alongside industry changes, ensuring users have the most current information at their fingertips.
  • Comprehensive Resource Hub: The platform aims to centralize critical information, addressing common challenges such as fragmented knowledge, revenue leakage, compliance risks, and operational inefficiencies.
  • Expert Leadership: Dr. Caroline E. Fife, who has been instrumental in TWC’s success, continues to contribute her expertise, ensuring that WCBN maintains the high standards and relevance that readers have come to expect.

This strategic evolution signifies a commitment to empowering wound care professionals with the resources needed to optimize patient care and practice management in a rapidly changing healthcare landscape.

Read the full article on the HMP Global Learning Network website.

Keywords:
Wound Care Business Navigator,
Today’s Wound Clinic,
wound care reimbursement,
practice management,
regulatory compliance

Top ten tips: Preventing and treating skin tears

Top‑Ten Tips for Preventing and Treating Skin Tears

Skin tears are common in older adults due to thinning skin and loss of elasticity. Wounds International outlines ten practical strategies aimed at prevention, early recognition, and effective management. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search0]{index=0}

Key Highlights:

  • 1. Prioritize Prevention: Understand that aged skin is fragile—fragile skin is more prone to tearing. Early, proactive strategies are essential. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search0]{index=0}
  • 2. Maintain Skin Hydration: Regular use of fragrance‑free, hypoallergenic moisturizers preserves skin elasticity, reducing tear risk. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search0]{index=0}
  • 3. Choose Cost‑Effective Silicone Dressings: Silicone contact layers or foam dressings are preferred—they support healing, protect during removal, and minimize trauma. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search4]{index=0}
  • 4. Use ISTAP Best Practices: Re‑approximate skin flaps gently, avoid stretching, cleanse properly, balance moisture, and limit infection. These are foundational principles. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search4]{index=0}
  • 5. Educate Staff and Patients: Training to identify, classify, and manage skin tears fosters consistent, evidence‑based care. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search4]{index=0}
  • 6. Document and Classify Tears: Use the ISTAP type I/II/III system (no flap loss, partial flap loss, total flap loss) and implement decision algorithms promptly. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search9]{index=0}
  • 7. Preserve Skin Flaps: Whenever possible, reposition viable skin back into place to encourage natural healing. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search9]{index=0}
  • 8. Secure Flaps Without Adhesives: Use silicone dressings or gentle bandaging methods to anchor skin without trauma. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search4]{index=0}
  • 9. Monitor Exudate and Contamination: Control fluid balance and look out for signs of infection or deteriorating wound edges. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search4]{index=0}
  • 10. Incorporate Flap‑Friendly Dressings in Protocols: Avoid adhesives, hydrocolloids, and gauze; prefer silicone-based products to support healing and reduce trauma. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search4]{index=0}

Integrating these tenets into education and care pathways—alongside tools like the ISTAP Decision‑Classification guide—can significantly reduce incidence, distress, and treatment costs associated with skin tears. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search5]{index=0}

Read the full article on the Wounds International website.

Keywords:
skin tears,
ISTAP,
silicone dressings,
moisturizers,
skin tear prevention

Outcome Measures of Quality of Life for People With Chronic Wounds

Outcome Measures of Quality of Life for People With Chronic Wounds: A Scoping Review

A scoping review published in *JWOCN* (May–June 2025) by Dantas et al. mapped validated patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) used to assess health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in individuals with chronic wounds. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search0]{index=0}

Key Highlights:

  • Review Scope: Surveyed literature from 1990 to April 2024 across MEDLINE, CINAHL, PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus, identifying 30 studies evaluating HRQoL in chronic wound patients. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search0]{index=0}
  • Instruments Identified: Twelve validated tools were used—six generic (e.g., SF-36 in 19%, EQ-5D-5L in 9%) and six wound-specific. Notably, the Cardiff Wound Impact Schedule and Wound‑QoL each appeared in 16% of studies. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search0]{index=0}
  • Instrument Benefits: Generic measures allow comparisons with other chronic conditions and populations, but may underrepresent wound-specific QoL changes. Wound-specific instruments capture the multidimensional impacts on patients’ lives more sensitively. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search0]{index=0}
  • Research Gaps: The review highlights limited use of PROMs in chronic wound studies, calling for more longitudinal and interventional research to validate their clinical utility. :contentReference[oaicite:turn0search0]{index=0}

Understanding which PROMs reliably capture HRQoL among patients with chronic wounds is essential for patient-centered care, enabling better assessment of therapeutic impact and guiding future investigations.

Read the full abstract in the Journal of Wound Ostomy & Continence Nursing.

Keywords:
PROMs,
HRQoL,
SF-36,
EQ-5D-5L,
Wound‑QoL

Bridging the Gap: Communicating With Adolescents in WOC Nursing

Bridging the Gap: Communicating With Adolescents in WOC Nursing

A narrative review in the May–June 2025 issue of Journal of Wound Ostomy and Continence Nursing explores communication strategies for WOC nurses working with adolescent patients. The review emphasizes the importance of tailoring interactions to meet the unique developmental, cultural, and privacy needs of teens to improve trust, adherence, and long-term outcomes.

Key Highlights:

  • Understanding Adolescent Development: Effective communication strategies must account for adolescents’ maturing cognitive skills, growing desire for independence, and heightened sensitivity to body image and social acceptance.
  • Cultural Sensitivity & Privacy: Respecting cultural norms and protecting patient confidentiality—especially in areas like continence care or ostomy management—are essential to building trust and encouraging openness.
  • Tech-Friendly Engagement: Adolescents are more responsive to mobile apps, social media, and tech-enabled platforms. Integrating digital tools can foster greater involvement, though privacy concerns must be managed carefully.
  • Developmentally-Appropriate Communication: Using simplified language, visual aids, and allowing space for questions can help ensure adolescents understand treatment goals and self-care responsibilities.
  • Fostering Autonomy: Age-appropriate communication empowers teens to manage their condition independently, supporting lifelong adherence and self-efficacy.

This review highlights the importance of communication that is culturally informed, privacy-conscious, and tailored to the adolescent developmental stage—ensuring better outcomes and more confident, engaged patients.

Read the full article in the Journal of Wound Ostomy and Continence Nursing.

Keywords:
WOCN communication,
adolescent health,
cultural competence,
patient engagement,
self‑management

The Critical Need for Standardization in Wound Dressing Evaluation

The Critical Need for Standardization in Wound Dressing Evaluation

A recent article from WoundSource highlights the urgent need to establish standardized approaches for evaluating and selecting wound dressings. Current practices suffer from inconsistency, making it difficult to ensure clinicians and patients receive the most appropriate, evidence-backed products. Standardization could streamline care, improve comparative effectiveness, and enhance patient outcomes. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

Key Highlights:

  • Variability in Dressings: Clinicians rely on a wide range of dressing types—films, foams, hydrocolloids, alginates, gelling fibres, NPWT, collagen, cadexomer iodine, honey-based options, and enzymatic debriders—with little consistency in evaluation criteria.
  • Evaluation Framework Gaps: There’s a lack of consensus on essential metrics such as absorption rates, wear time, antimicrobial properties, patient comfort, cost-effectiveness, and ease of use.
  • Need for Evidence-Based Tools: A call for validated lab and clinical testing protocols to compare dressing performance across key parameters like debridement support, moisture balance, and barrier function.
  • Impact on Access and Outcomes: Without standardized evaluation, payers and providers face challenges in formulary decisions, potentially limiting patient access and inflating costs for suboptimal products.

This article emphasizes that establishing rigorous, universally accepted standards for dressing evaluation is essential—not only for clinical decision-making, but also for improving product quality, reimbursement clarity, and ultimately, patient care.

Read the full piece on the WoundSource website.

Keywords:
wound dressing evaluation,
standardization,
evidence-based dressings,
comparative effectiveness,
product access

Understanding the Link Between Sitting and Pressure Ulcer Risk

Understanding the Link Between Sitting and Pressure Ulcer Risk: New Seating Guidelines

The Society of Tissue Viability has launched the third edition of its Seating Guidelines, spotlighting the often-overlooked connection between prolonged sitting and the development of pressure ulcers. These evidence-based recommendations are designed to help clinicians, caregivers, and patients reduce risk and improve outcomes—especially for adults with limited mobility.

Key Highlights:

  • Guideline Launch: The new guidelines were introduced during a free webinar held on 25 June 2025, offering practical tools for health and social care professionals working in hospitals, home settings, and long-term care facilities.
  • Scale of the Problem: Pressure ulcers affect over 700,000 people annually in the UK and cost the NHS an estimated £3.8 million per day. Many cases are preventable with proper seating assessment and interventions.
  • Seating as a Risk Factor: Prolonged sitting places excessive pressure on high-risk areas such as the sacrum and ischial tuberosities. The updated guidelines explain how these pressure points contribute to tissue damage over time.
  • Prevention Strategies: Recommendations include frequent repositioning, daily skin inspections, use of pressure-relieving cushions, good posture, appropriate chair fit, moisture management, and proper nutrition to support skin integrity.
  • Collaborative Development: The guidelines were created with input from clinicians, carers, and individuals with lived experience, ensuring the content is accessible, relevant, and grounded in real-world care settings.

This update serves as a critical reminder that seating matters—and that evidence-based positioning and equipment can significantly reduce preventable pressure injuries, particularly in at-risk populations.

Source: Society of Tissue Viability – June 2025

Keywords: pressure ulcers, seating guidelines, pressure management, mobility, caregivers

Read more on the Society of Tissue Viability website

Efficacy of Cytoreg in the Treatment of Diabetic Foot Disease

Efficacy of Cytoreg in the Treatment of Diabetic Foot Disease

A compassionate-use study evaluated Cytoreg—an investigational aqueous acid blend—administered orally and topically to patients with diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) over 30 days.

Key Highlights:

  • Study Design: Ten patients participated. All received oral Cytoreg; five also received weekly topical washes. Wound progress was tracked using the Saint Elian scoring system.
  • Healing Outcomes: In the oral + topical group, 4 of 5 patients achieved complete healing; the fifth lost necrotic tissue. In the oral-only group, 2 of 4 achieved complete healing.
  • Systemic Effects: Both groups showed significant rises in arterial hemoglobin and arterial oxygen partial pressure, along with reductions in HbA1c, liver enzymes, creatinine, and urea levels.
  • Safety & Justification: No major adverse events were noted. Findings support the need for larger, controlled trials.

This preliminary study highlights Cytoreg’s potential to accelerate DFU closure and improve systemic laboratory markers—particularly when combined with topical application. However, randomized controlled trials are needed to validate efficacy and safety.

Based on Carrillo et al., “Efficacy of Cytoreg in the Treatment of Diabetic Foot Disease,” Journal of Wound Care (December 2024).

Keywords: Cytoreg, diabetic foot ulcer, Saint Elian system, acid therapy, systemic oxygen

Read the full article on Wound Central


🔬 Spotlight: Acid-Based Therapies & Oxygen-Enhancing Adjuncts for DFUs

With Cytoreg showing promise as both an oral and topical treatment for diabetic foot ulcers, clinicians may look to similar agents that modulate tissue pH, promote oxygen delivery, or support wound debridement and granulation through biochemical means.

  • Granudacyn® (Mölnlycke): A hypochlorous-acid–based wound irrigation solution and gel. Offers antimicrobial action while supporting moist wound healing. Safe for long-term use and ideal for DFUs at risk of infection.
  • UrgoClean Ag® (Urgo Medical): Though not acid-based, this silver-reinforced fiber dressing helps modulate local bioburden and create a favorable wound pH microenvironment for DFU healing.
  • Topical Oxygen Therapy (e.g., NATROX®, Epiflo®): These devices deliver low-flow oxygen directly to the wound bed, enhancing angiogenesis and collagen synthesis. Similar to the systemic oxygenation improvements seen with Cytoreg in early studies.
  • pH-modulating gels (e.g., Wound pHarma prototypes): Still investigational, these are designed to shift chronic wound pH from alkaline to mildly acidic, restoring protease activity balance and promoting granulation.
  • Hydrochlorous Acid Sprays (e.g., Vashe®, Puracyn®): Used for wound cleansing and inflammation control. While not systemic, their acidic pH and antimicrobial profile support wound bed preparation—especially in biofilm-laden DFUs.

Adjuncts that influence the wound’s chemical microenvironment—either through pH, oxygenation, or targeted biochemical pathways—are increasingly seen as critical tools alongside debridement and systemic support in diabetic foot ulcer management. Cytoreg’s dual administration model is an emerging concept worth watching as trials expand.

User experiences of patients’ relatives with a computer game about pressure ulcer prevention

User Experiences with a Pressure Ulcer Prevention Game: A Qualitative Study

A June 2025 descriptive qualitative study published in *Journal of Wound Management* explores user experiences of a computer-based pressure ulcer prevention game—designed for patients and relatives to build awareness, improve self-care, and reduce caregiver burden.

Key Highlights:

  • Engaging Format: The interactive game uses real-world scenarios to teach posture shifts, cushion selection, skin inspection, and risk factors in a narrative-based format.
  • Positive Reception: Players described the game as enjoyable, educational, and easy to navigate—reporting improved confidence in identifying risk factors and prevention strategies.
  • Emotional Impact: Users appreciated the immersive storytelling that fostered empathy and motivation, with some citing a greater sense of responsibility for loved ones’ care.
  • Areas for Improvement: Participants suggested enhancements such as adaptive difficulty levels, more personalized scenarios, multilingual support, and mobile access to increase reach.
  • Caregiver Benefit: Family members noted that shared gameplay created meaningful discussions about pressure ulcer prevention and even empowered them to participate in repositioning routines more confidently.

This study supports the role of gamified digital tools in patient and caregiver education, offering an engaging way to improve preventative behavior and promote collaborative care efforts.

Based on Nielsen & Krabbe Sørensen, “User experiences of a computer game about pressure ulcer prevention: descriptive qualitative study,” *Journal of Wound Management*, Volume 26, Issue 2—June 2025.

Keywords: pressure ulcer game, patient education, caregiver engagement, gamification, qualitative study

Read the full study on Journal of Wound Management

Exposing the “Second Skin” Scam

Exposing the “Second Skin” Scam: Medicare Fraud Charges Rock Wound Care Sector

In a case that has sent shockwaves through the wound care and podiatry communities, a Texas podiatrist and his business partner have been indicted for allegedly orchestrating one of the largest Medicare fraud schemes involving bioengineered skin substitutes to date.

Dr. David Jenson, a practicing podiatrist in The Woodlands, TX, and Néstor Refael Romero Magallanes, his business partner, are accused of submitting over $90 million in fraudulent Medicare claims and receiving more than $45 million in reimbursements through their company, Doctor’s Inc. The Department of Justice has charged the pair with conspiracy to commit health care fraud and aggravated identity theft, among other allegations.

The Core of the Scheme: “Second Skin” Exploitation

At the heart of the case is the misuse of high-cost, bioengineered skin substitutes—often referred to in clinical parlance as “second skin” products. These advanced wound care materials, such as amniotic or cellular tissue allografts, are FDA-cleared for complex, non-healing wounds like diabetic foot ulcers or venous leg ulcers. However, the treatment is only reimbursable under Medicare when medically necessary and properly documented.

Prosecutors allege that Jenson and Romero systematically billed Medicare for skin substitute applications that were neither medically necessary nor actually performed as documented. They often cited vague complaints such as “swelling,” “foot pain,” or “skin discoloration” as justifications for treatment, even when no chronic wound was present.

More troubling, the duo is said to have fabricated patient records and misrepresented to patients that their Medicare plans fully covered the procedures—when in fact, some of the billed services had already been flagged by Medicare as ineligible or questionable. Patients, many of them elderly or Spanish-speaking, were often unaware of the scope of the procedures or the financial ramifications of the claims submitted in their name.

Pattern of Deception, Despite Warnings

The indictment reveals that the alleged scheme persisted even after a clear warning. In early 2023, federal authorities reportedly issued a cease-and-desist communication to Doctor’s Inc. regarding billing irregularities. Rather than complying, Jenson and Romero allegedly continued their billing practices, attempting to disguise them through alternate business entities and falsified documentation.

According to the DOJ, multiple fictitious wound diagnoses were created to justify the skin substitute applications, and services were often reported as being provided by supervising physicians who were not present or affiliated with the patient’s care. In some cases, patients were never physically evaluated before billing was submitted for complex wound procedures.

The volume of applications billed is staggering: thousands of claims for expensive skin substitute treatments over a short time span, often for the same patient at an unsustainable frequency. The total amount billed—$90 million—makes this one of the largest fraud cases involving regenerative wound products on record.

Why This Case Matters to the Wound Care Community

The indictment has renewed scrutiny over the use and oversight of cellular- and tissue-based products (CTPs) in outpatient and podiatric care settings. While these products are clinically valuable when applied correctly, they’ve become a magnet for abuse due to their high reimbursement rates and limited auditing mechanisms.

In recent years, CMS and commercial insurers have raised concerns about CTP overutilization. Several skin substitute products have been subjected to increased prior authorization requirements, reimbursement limits, and tracking under quality improvement initiatives. This case could accelerate further regulatory tightening, potentially affecting legitimate providers who follow guidelines and treat truly chronic, non-healing wounds.

“What we’re seeing is not just financial fraud—it’s clinical fraud,” said one wound care specialist who asked to remain anonymous. “Overuse of these materials, when unjustified, not only wastes taxpayer money but also compromises patient care and erodes public trust in regenerative medicine.”

Implications for Compliance, Clinics, and Patients

This case underscores the importance of robust compliance protocols, especially for practices offering advanced wound care. Medical directors and billing departments must ensure strict adherence to Medicare’s Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs), accurate clinical documentation, and physician supervision during procedures.

Patients, particularly Medicare beneficiaries, are urged to regularly review their Explanation of Benefits (EOBs) and to report any treatments or procedures they do not recognize. Advocacy organizations may also need to invest more in educating patients about their rights and responsibilities under Medicare.

The long-term impact of this case could include:

  • More aggressive post-payment audits on skin substitute claims
  • Greater scrutiny of podiatric practices with unusually high volume of applications
  • Potential manufacturer-level investigations if promotional practices contributed to off-label or fraudulent use

Next Steps in the Legal Process

Jenson and Romero have been formally indicted and may face additional federal charges as the investigation continues. If convicted, they could be sentenced to decades in federal prison and be required to repay tens of millions of dollars to the Medicare program. Investigators are also reviewing whether employees or third-party suppliers were involved in the scheme.

In the meantime, the case serves as a stark warning: the misuse of advanced wound care technologies not only jeopardizes public funds but may threaten the future availability of these tools for patients who genuinely need them.

Keywords: Medicare fraud, skin substitute, wound care compliance, cellular tissue products, DOJ investigation

Editor’s Note: The defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. This article reflects public charges and allegations and does not assert guilt.

Diagnosis & Management of Diabetic Foot Complications

Diagnosis & Management of Diabetic Foot Complications

Originally published in a 2018 American Diabetes Association compendium, this review by Andrew J.M. Boulton, David G. Armstrong, and Robert S. Kirsner offers a comprehensive roadmap for addressing diabetic foot complications, with a focus on prevention, timely diagnosis, and limb preservation.

Key Insights:

  • Prevalence & Burden: Diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) affect up to 34% of people with diabetes in their lifetime. DFUs are the leading cause of lower-extremity amputations, many of which are preventable with early intervention.
  • Risk Factors: Peripheral neuropathy, peripheral artery disease, foot deformity, infection, and poor glycemic control significantly increase DFU and amputation risk.
  • Screening & Diagnosis: The authors emphasize regular foot exams, monofilament testing, vascular assessment, and the use of classification tools like the Wagner or University of Texas systems.
  • Management Strategies: Effective treatment includes offloading, sharp debridement, infection control, vascular evaluation, and referral to a multidisciplinary team when necessary.
  • Advanced Therapies: Adjunctive approaches include growth factors, skin substitutes, stem cell-based products, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, and negative pressure wound therapy—especially for non-healing or complex wounds.
  • Charcot Neuroarthropathy: Often underdiagnosed, Charcot foot requires early recognition and prolonged offloading to prevent collapse and ulceration.

This ADA compendium remains a foundational resource for clinicians working to reduce DFU incidence and preserve limbs through coordinated, evidence-based care.

Keywords:
Andrew J.M. Boulton,
David G. Armstrong,
Robert S. Kirsner,
diabetic foot ulcer,
Charcot foot,
offloading,
hyperbaric oxygen therapy,
negative pressure wound therapy,
limb preservation

Read the full article on ResearchGate

Antimicrobial resistance and antimicrobial stewardship: an update

Antimicrobial Resistance & Stewardship: A Wound-Care Update

Published in Volume 33, Issue 2 of Wound Practice & Research (June 2025), this narrative review by Mark G. Rippon, Alan A. Rogers, and Karen Ousey explores the growing global challenge of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and its implications for wound care. The article underscores the urgency of implementing robust antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) strategies in both acute and chronic wound management.

Key Highlights:

  • Rising Threat of AMR: The misuse and overuse of antibiotics have contributed to rising resistance in wound pathogens, particularly in biofilm-associated infections that are difficult to eradicate.
  • Core Elements of Stewardship: AMS programs emphasize the judicious use of antimicrobials—optimizing drug selection, dosage, treatment duration, and administration route to reduce resistance and improve outcomes.
  • Biofilm Considerations: Biofilms in chronic wounds complicate treatment due to their tolerance to antibiotics and host defenses, reinforcing the need for tailored AMS approaches in wound care settings.
  • Alternative Strategies: The review discusses the role of antimicrobial dressings, bacteriophage therapy, and novel bioengineered compounds as potential tools to reduce reliance on systemic antibiotics.
  • Global AMS Initiatives: Effective stewardship requires a multidisciplinary approach, incorporating surveillance, diagnostic stewardship, prescribing audits, and education at all levels of care.

As wound-related infections continue to evolve, the integration of AMS principles into clinical practice is critical to sustaining effective treatment options and minimizing the spread of resistance.

Keywords:
Mark G. Rippon,
Alan A. Rogers,
Karen Ousey,
antimicrobial resistance,
antimicrobial stewardship,
chronic wound infection,
biofilm,
antimicrobial dressing

Read the full article in Wound Practice & Research

More rural, minoritised people get amputations—AI gets closer to why

More Rural, Minoritised Patients Face Higher Amputation Rates—AI Sheds Light on Why

A recent study led by the University of Maryland, published in *Epidemiology*, uses AI to analyze over 1.5 million hospitalizations (2017–19) of adults over 40 with peripheral artery disease or chronic limb‑threatening ischemia. It reveals that unconscious provider bias contributes significantly to higher amputation rates among rural and minoritized communities.

Key Findings:

  • Disparities Confirmed: After adjusting for clinical and systemic factors, Black, Hispanic, and Native American patients in rural areas—and Black and Native American patients in urban settings—still experienced significantly higher amputation rates compared to others :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}.
  • AI Reveals Hidden Bias: The model evaluated 70 + variables—including health status, hospital access, regional care capacity, and socioeconomic context—and flagged potential unconscious bias in clinical decision-making :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}.
  • Clinical Implications: Vascular surgeons often navigate complex treatment decisions. Without clear guidelines to choose between limb-sparing revascularization and amputation, provider instinct—potentially influenced by bias—may steer outcomes :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}.
  • AI as a Solution: AI models that incorporate intersectional variables (race, income, rurality) can help identify disparities and guide development of more equitable, evidence-based guidelines :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}.

This work underscores the urgent need to address implicit biases within vascular care and empowers clinicians with data-driven tools to promote equitable limb preservation.

Keywords:
Paula Strassle,
Katharine McGinigle,
peripheral artery disease,
chronic limb-threatening ischemia,
unconscious bias,
amputation disparities,
AI in vascular decision-making

Read the full report on University of Maryland Today

We come to you: recognising the challenges of access to quality wound specialists

We Come to You: Expanding Access Through Post-Acute Mobile Wound Care

This editorial from JWC Wound Central highlights the growing importance of mobile wound care services in addressing barriers to access for patients with hard-to-heal wounds. As populations age and mobility challenges rise, many patients are unable to access advanced care through traditional outpatient clinics—whether due to location, physical limitations, social isolation, or lack of insurance coverage.

Key Highlights:

  • Rising Need for Access: Post-acute mobile wound care has emerged to meet the growing need for at-home or facility-based services across hospitals, nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and group homes.
  • Technology On-the-Go: These mobile services offer patients access to cutting-edge tools like CAMPs (cellular, acellular, matrix-like products) and near-infrared spectroscopy previously limited to wound centers.
  • iPAWS Summit 2024: The inaugural International Post-Acute Wound Society (iPAWS) Summit, held in New Orleans, convened over 200 clinicians to advance education, business models, and competency-based training for mobile wound care providers.
  • Featured Sessions:
    • Medical Necessity Documentation – William O’Malley, former Medicare Auditor
    • The Business of the Mobile Model – Dennis Deruelle, MD; Martha Kelso, RN, CHWS, DAPWCA, HBOT; and Naz Wahab, MD
  • Call to Action: As mobile wound care rapidly becomes a core element of the specialty, education and advocacy must grow alongside it to ensure equitable, expert-level care reaches every patient in need—regardless of setting.

This movement underscores a shift in wound care delivery—meeting patients where they are, while embracing technological innovation and reshaping access across the care continuum.

Keywords:
post-acute wound care,
mobile wound care,
iPAWS,
Martha Kelso,
Dennis Deruelle,
Naz Wahab,
William O’Malley,
cellular acellular matrix,
near-infrared spectroscopy,
wound access equity

Read the full editorial in JWC Wound Central

The Frank & Lizzie Show Episode 029: Vascular Assessments Should NOT Keep Your Patients Waiting

Empowering Patients and Providers: Highlights from the iPAWS Summit 2024

This video recap from the International Post-Acute Wound Society (iPAWS) captures key insights and energy from the 2024 iPAWS Summit in New Orleans. The event focused on the expanding field of post-acute wound care, drawing together clinicians, thought leaders, and innovators dedicated to improving access and outcomes in non-traditional care settings.

Featured Themes:

  • Mobile Wound Care: The conference highlighted the rapid growth of mobile wound care services and their role in reaching patients who lack access to hospital-based wound centers.
  • Technology and Innovation: Speakers discussed emerging tools like CAMPs (cellular, acellular, and matrix-like products) and near-infrared spectroscopy for advanced assessment and healing support.
  • Education and Advocacy: The Summit emphasized ongoing education for post-acute care professionals and the need for broader policy and reimbursement reform.

With participation from over 200 clinicians, the event served as both a learning platform and a rallying point for elevating wound care standards across diverse care environments.

Keywords:
iPAWS,
post-acute wound care,
mobile wound care,
advanced wound care technologies,
wound care conference

Watch on YouTube

Does Cognitive Dysfunction Impact Diabetic Foot Ulcer Outcomes?

Does Cognitive Dysfunction Impact Diabetic Foot Ulcer Outcomes?

In a retrospective study presented at the SAWC Fall Symposium, Dr. Christopher Girgis and colleagues explored how cognitive dysfunction affects healing outcomes in patients with diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs). The findings raise critical considerations for clinicians treating this vulnerable population.

Key Findings:

  • Patient Profile: The study included 56 patients with DFUs and cognitive dysfunction (mean age 71.9) and 68 patients with DFUs but without cognitive dysfunction (mean age 56).
  • Healing Outcomes: At 6 months, only 32% of patients with cognitive dysfunction achieved healing, compared to 72% in the non-cognitively impaired group.
  • Amputations and Admissions: Higher-level amputations were more frequent in the cognitive dysfunction group (17.8% vs 5.9%), and hospital admissions were nearly twice as common (57.1% vs 33.8%).

Clinical Implications: Cognitive dysfunction may severely hinder a patient’s ability to perform self-care, a critical factor in DFU management. Dr. Girgis emphasizes the need for better screening protocols in podiatric settings and urges providers to involve caregivers, initiate referrals to neurology when appropriate, and consider home health or social work support.

Tailored patient education and tighter follow-up protocols may help reduce poor outcomes and guide future prospective studies on cognitive screening tools in wound care.

Keywords:
Christopher Girgis,
Rebecca E. Cohen,
Rostyslav Bublii,
Rimvydas A. Statkus,
diabetic foot ulcers,
cognitive impairment,
amputation risk,
self-care adherence,
SAWC Fall

Read the full article

Cellular Tissue Product / Skin Substitute Payment Proposed Rule – the Illustrated Version

Proposed CMS Rule May Eliminate Separate Payment for Skin Substitutes

In a recent blog post, Dr. Caroline Fife examines the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS) 2025 Proposed Physician Fee Schedule, which includes a significant shift in how cellular and/or tissue-based products for skin wounds (CTPs) may be reimbursed. The rule proposes to package payment for skin substitutes into the procedure code itself, effectively ending separate reimbursement for these materials under Medicare Part B in the office setting.

Key Points:

  • Background: The CMS rule would bundle skin substitute payments with provider fees, similar to the current hospital outpatient payment model. This change would apply to physician offices, not just hospital settings.
  • Concerns Raised: Dr. Fife warns this could reduce access to important wound healing products, particularly for providers without the financial resources to absorb upfront material costs.
  • Stakeholder Impact: Many small practices and providers serving vulnerable populations may stop using CTPs altogether, which could worsen outcomes for patients with chronic wounds.
  • Call to Action: Dr. Fife encourages clinicians and stakeholders to submit public comments to CMS before the September deadline and engage with their professional societies to ensure their voices are heard.

Conclusion: The proposed rule represents a major reimbursement shift with potentially far-reaching consequences for wound care delivery in physician offices. Advocacy and awareness are essential to protect access to these vital treatment tools.

Keywords: Caroline Fife, CMS, skin substitutes, Medicare, CTP, reimbursement, wound care policy

Read the full article on CarolineFifeMD.com

Shifting Paradigms from Habit to Evidence

Shifting Paradigms from Habit to Evidence in Wound Care Practice

A recent Clinical Insights column on WoundSource by **Windy Cole, DPM** emphasizes the need for clinicians to move beyond traditional habits and towards an evidence-driven, proactive approach in wound care.

Main Themes:

  • Habitual Patterns vs. Evidence-Based Practice: Dr. Cole challenges practitioners to evaluate legacy workflows and embrace updated protocols grounded in current research.
  • Preventive over Reactive: The shift involves prioritizing preventive management—such as early infection detection, offloading strategies, and moisture balance—before wounds progress.
  • Protease and Biomarker Awareness: Understanding wound biochemistry (e.g. protease levels, MMP activity) can inform dressing choices and intervention timing.
  • Educational Empowerment: Staying current through webinars, expert opinion, and updated practice modules like Wound Balance frameworks enhances patient outcomes.

Clinical Implications: Wound care professionals should routinely question outdated practices, engage with ongoing education, and utilize clinician tools (e.g. Wound Balance, biomarker-guided dressing selection) to deliver more precise and outcome-focused care.

Keywords: Windy Cole, evidence-based practice, preventive wound care, protease biomarkers, Wound Balance, Clinical Insights, practice habits

Read the full article on WoundSource

Proteases: What Are They and Why Do They Matter?

Proteases: What Are They and Why Do They Matter?

An insightful blog post on WoundSource by **Windy Cole, DPM** highlights the critical role of **proteases** in wound biology—a dual nature where they are essential for healing but can also drive chronicity when unchecked.

Key Takeaways:

  • Definition & Function: Proteases are enzymes that cleave proteins, aiding in processes like extracellular matrix (ECM) breakdown, cell migration, and remodeling during normal wound healing. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
  • When Too Much Becomes Too Little: In chronic, non‑healing wounds, elevated protease levels—particularly MMPs—overwhelm tissue inhibitors (TIMPs), leading to damage to growth factors, ECM components, and the wound bed. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
  • Clinical Implications: Dressings that modulate protease activity—like collagen/oxidized regenerated cellulose (ORC) matrices—can improve healing by neutralizing excessive proteases. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
  • Diagnostics and Point-of-Care Testing: High protease activity is emerging as a biomarker for stalled healing. Rapid protease detection tools could help clinicians make more precise therapeutic decisions. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}

Conclusion: Proteases are both healing facilitators and potential destroyers—a delicate balance that wound care clinicians need to recognize and manage. Protease-targeted interventions and diagnostics hold promise for optimizing outcomes in complex wounds.

Keywords: Windy Cole, proteases, matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), protease‑modulating dressings, protease diagnostics, chronic wound healing

Read the full post on WoundSource

Revolutionising diabetic foot care: a system in urgent need of reform

Revolutionising Diabetic Foot Care: A System in Urgent Need of Reform

A compelling editorial in *The Diabetic Foot Journal* reflects on a debate with Professor Mike Edmonds regarding the future of multidisciplinary diabetic foot teams (MDFTs). Although Edmonds’ motion—that MDFTs belong solely in secondary care—won the vote, the discussion highlighted the pressing need to modernize diabetic foot care systems.

Key Insights:

  • Systemic Challenges: Rising prevalence of diabetic foot complications strains current services. Issues include gaps in access, underfunding, diminished staffing, and outdated models of care that struggle to adapt to evolving demands.
  • Learning from the Past: While early MDFTs—pioneered in the 1980s—improved outcomes, current infrastructure and resource limitations now hinder effectiveness, reminiscent of a once-dominant sports team that failed to evolve.
  • Global Innovation: Countries like Australia and the Netherlands have implemented telemedicine, integrated care models, and AI tools to improve workflows and diagnostics. These models offer a roadmap for modernization.
  • Virtual Wards as a Solution: The UK’s virtual ward model delivered hospital-level diabetic foot care at home, yielding significant cost savings and reduced bed occupancy. Similar programs abroad have shown promise in extending care access and efficiency.
  • What’s Next: There’s an urgent need for digital transformation, AI-supported diagnostics, enhanced patient engagement, community-based care access, and upskilling of podiatry professionals to reframe services around patient needs—not just the system’s convenience.

Conclusion: Modernizing diabetic foot care requires bold reform—integrating technology, virtual care, and community-based approaches to create equitable, efficient, and patient-centered services. The question now is not whether change is necessary—but whether we have the courage to act.

Keywords: Mike Edmonds, multidisciplinary foot team, diabetic foot care, systemic reform, virtual wards, telemedicine, AI diagnostics, community care

Read the full editorial on Diabetes on the Net

The Role of Communication in Managing Chronic Lower Limb Wounds

The Role of Communication in Managing Chronic Lower Limb Wounds

Summary: Published in the Journal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare (June 25, 2025), this narrative review by Davide Costa and Raffaele Serra explores how effective communication—between clinicians, and between providers and patients—impacts outcomes in chronic lower limb wound care. The authors examine patient education, health literacy, remote care technologies, interdisciplinary teamwork, and culturally sensitive strategies.

Key Insights:

  • Structured, empathetic provider-patient communication improves adherence, early detection, and supports emotional well-being.
  • Interdisciplinary communication frameworks like SBAR and integrated electronic records reduce errors and improve care coordination.
  • Innovations like telemedicine, mHealth apps, and AI-based chatbots expand access and reinforce patient engagement.
  • Persistent barriers include low health literacy, cultural and language differences, and unequal access to digital tools.
  • Addressing these challenges requires culturally tailored materials, motivational interviewing, digital literacy support, and equitable policy designs.

Conclusion: Communication is not just a clinical tool but a foundational component of chronic wound management—essential for patient adherence, team collaboration, and reducing disparities in care.

🔗 Read the full article


Keywords: chronic wounds, communication, interdisciplinary care, patient adherence, telemedicine, health literacy

Lunch Bytes Webinars from Wounds Australia

Wounds Australia – Lunch Bytes Webinar Series (Wound Awareness Week)

Summary: During Wound Awareness Week (September 1–7), Wounds Australia is hosting a free “Lunch Bytes” webinar series, offering practical insights for clinicians and consumers on various wound care topics. The sessions feature expert presenters discussing prevention, management, and patient support strategies for complex wound conditions.

  • Monday, 1 SeptemberWhat does Charcot foot mean to you?
    Presented by Dr. Ben Bullen (Monash University). Covers early detection, pathogenesis, management, and health literacy in Charcot foot.
  • Wednesday, 3 SeptemberFrom Acute to Healed: Collaborative Strategies to Prevent Chronic Wounds
    Presented by pharmacist Lara Gliani and RN Melissa Freeman. Focuses on community care strategies for preventing chronic wounds.
  • Thursday, 4 SeptemberLeaky Legs & Lingering Ulcers: Tackling Lymphorrhea & Venous Disease
    Presented by Hayley Ryan (WoundRescue Pty Ltd). Explores pathophysiology and practical strategies for managing lymphorrhea and venous ulcers.
  • Friday, 5 SeptemberEarly Intervention and Recurrence Prevention in Diabetic Foot Ulcers
    Presented by Professor Dr. David Armstrong. Emphasizes the importance of early action, “ulcer remission,” predictive tools, and monitoring.
  • Saturday, 6 SeptemberCaring for Ageing Skin (consumer/carer session)
    Presented by Dr. Robyn Rayner. Offers tips on skin care for older adults, including preventing skin tears and maintaining skin health.

All sessions are available for later viewing via the on-demand archive.

🔗 View the full details on Wounds Australia’s website

Keywords: Wounds Australia, Wound Awareness Week, Charcot foot, chronic wounds, lymphorrhea, venous disease, diabetic foot ulcers, ageing skin

Charcot’s Legacy in Cast and Canvas: Visual Healing in Modern Diabetic Foot Care

Charcot’s Legacy in Cast and Canvas: Visual Healing in Modern Diabetic Foot Care

Summary: This letter to the editor in The International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds reflects on how Jean-Martin Charcot’s fusion of medicine and art still shapes contemporary diabetic foot care. Charcot’s visual pedagogy—sketches, casts, and sculptures (often in collaboration with physician-artist Paul Richer)—helped clinicians “see what others overlook,” linking bedside observation with anatomical understanding. The author argues that this visual tradition endures today through photography, advanced imaging, and creative self-expression in care.

Key Points:

  • Visual communication as therapy: Creative expression (drawing, color, symbols) can provide patients with Charcot foot a language for vulnerability, offering psychological relief and reinforcing the therapeutic potential of art.
  • Patient voice and psychosocial burden: Qualitative narratives (e.g., work cited by Jody Lucas) describe immobilization, pain, isolation, and even suicidality; patients report restricted mobility, employment disruption, and strained family roles during long casting periods.
  • Holistic, empathetic care: The piece calls for integrated models that address both biomechanical needs (e.g., total contact casting) and psychosocial dimensions—validating lived experience, promoting connection, and using visuals to bridge clinician-patient understanding.
  • Modern echoes of Charcot: While tools have evolved from plaster casts to digital imaging, the clinician’s role as careful observer and interpreter remains central to patient-centered diabetic foot care.

Read the article at SAGE Journals

Keywords:
Jean-Martin Charcot,
Paul Richer,
Jody Lucas,
Charcot foot,
visual healing,
total contact cast,
patient-centered care,
art therapy in medicine

Wound Care Practitioners Should Screen Patients for Sleep Apnea

Wound Care Practitioners Should Screen Patients for Sleep Apnea—Here’s How!

Summary: In a reflective blog post on her site, **Caroline Fife, M.D.**, highlights the under-recognized role of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in delayed wound healing. She shares personal insight and clinical observations suggesting that leg edema, forgetfulness, and poor healing may be rooted in undiagnosed OSA—and urges wound care clinicians to proactively screen using the simple General Practice Sleep Scale (GPSS).

Key Highlights:

  • Sleep apnea may contribute to systemic issues (edema, poor wound repair, cognitive decline) that impede healing.
  • Patients frequently dismiss OSA symptoms as “normal aging”—practitioners can bridge that gap with targeted screening.
  • The GPSS offers a quick and effective tool to triage OSA risk, improving detection during routine visits.
  • Clinicians treating non-healing wounds should consider whether addressing systemic sleep disorders could transform outcomes.

Read the full blog post on CarolineFifeMD.com

Keywords:
sleep apnea,
wound healing,
leg edema,
GPSS (General Practice Sleep Scale),
screening tools,
Caroline Fife

From Healing to Remission: A Clinician’s Guide to Managing Diabetic Foot Ulcers

From Healing to Remission: A Clinician’s Guide to Managing Diabetic Foot Ulcers

Summary: A new article on Medscape reframes diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) care by encouraging clinicians to view a healed ulcer not as an endpoint, but as a remission state—one that demands ongoing prevention, monitoring, and patient education. The piece outlines proactive strategies to reduce ulcer recurrence, preserve limb function, and sustain long-term patient engagement.

Key Highlights:

  • Language shift: Using the term “in remission” instead of “healed” helps patients stay aware that DFU is a chronic condition with high risk of recurrence.
  • Structured limb-preservation plans: Follow-ups every 1-3 months in the first year post-healing, plus risk-based intervals afterward, with regular vascular assessments especially up through 18 months post-closure.
  • Prevention tools: Thermometry, remote monitoring of temperature/exudate/pressure/moisture, and protective footwear become central components of follow-up care.
  • Self-management: Patients (or caregivers) should perform daily inspections, recognizing early signs, even in the absence of overt sores; lifestyle moderators like glucose, lipids, and BP control also critical.
  • Psychosocial support: Screening for depression, social isolation, and other mental health or socio-economic factors that otherwise undermine preventive behaviors and healing maintenance.
  • Implementation challenges: Shifting to a remission model requires clinic protocol changes, multidisciplinary coordination, and policies that recognize the long-term burden of DFUs and CLTI (chronic limb threatening ischemia).

Read the full article on Medscape

Keywords:
diabetic foot ulcer,
remission model,
limb preservation plan,
thermometry,
patient self-care,
psychosocial support

Your Doctor Might Prescribe… A Video Game?

Your Doctor Might Prescribe… A Video Game?

Summary: A recent feature in Forbes (September 2025) by John Samuels explores the growing trend of prescribing video games as treatments—so-called digital therapeutics. These game-based interventions are being used for conditions like ADHD, depression, chronic pain, and anxiety. The article discusses evidence of efficacy, regulatory approval (such as FDA authorization), and challenges such as cost, accessibility, and ensuring clinical oversight.

Key Highlights:

  • Video games are being designed with therapeutic intent, not merely for entertainment—programs such as EndeavorRx are FDA-authorized for ADHD treatment in children. These aim to improve attention, reduce symptoms, and complement traditional therapies.
  • Evidence is accumulating: some trials show measurable improvements in attention, mood, and pain tracking when video-game interventions are used as adjuncts.
  • Regulatory and reimbursement issues remain unsettled. For many digital therapeutics, getting approval and insurance coverage is still a hurdle. Clinicians need to ensure these tools are evidence-based, appropriately prescribed, and integrated into the broader care plan.
  • Accessibility is an issue: game-based therapeutics require patient access to suitable devices, digital literacy, and ongoing monitoring. There can also be concerns about screen time, gaming addiction, and whether benefits translate outside game environments.
  • Potential cross-application to wound care: while the article doesn’t highlight wound healing directly, there’s opportunity to use similar approaches (gamified adherence, behavior change, or virtual reality) to support wound care patients—such as improving compliance with offloading, dressing changes, physical therapy, or pain management.

Read the full article in Forbes

Keywords:
digital therapeutics,
therapeutic video games,
EndeavorRx,
ADHD treatment,
behavior change,
John Samuels,
regulation digital therapeutics

From Molecules to Populations — Bridging Mechanistic and Clinical Insights in Diabetic Wound Healing

🔬 Spotlight: From Molecules to Populations — Bridging Mechanistic and Clinical Insights in Diabetic Wound Healing

Summary: Two recent publications highlight the full spectrum of diabetic wound research — from benchside mechanistic biology to population-level risk analysis. Together, they show how molecular targets and systemic biomarkers may eventually intersect to shape precision strategies for preventing and treating diabetic foot complications.

1. Molecular Focus — METTL3/GDF11 Pathway in Socket Healing

A study published in Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome and Obesity explored how METTL3-mediated m6A modification regulates GDF11 expression, promoting extraction socket healing in diabetic rat models. Researchers demonstrated that overexpression of METTL3 improved trabecular bone formation, enhanced soft tissue healing, and restored angiogenesis. Mechanistically, the pathway hinges on stabilizing GDF11 transcripts via m6A methylation. When GDF11 was knocked down, much of METTL3’s benefit was reversed, underscoring this axis as a potential therapeutic target.

Notably, the use of micro-CT, histology, and gene expression assays confirmed both structural and molecular benefits. The translational implication is clear: modulating RNA methylation machinery could one day enhance oral and cutaneous wound repair in patients with diabetes, moving beyond symptomatic care toward biomaterial or gene-based interventions.

2. Population Focus — Inflammation and Nutrition Biomarkers in DFU Risk

In contrast, a large combined cross-sectional and retrospective study in Frontiers in Endocrinology examined over 31,000 NHANES participants plus clinical cohorts. The analysis revealed that composite indices linking inflammation and nutrition — such as the neutrophil-albumin ratio (NAR), monocyte-albumin ratio (MAR), red cell distribution width-albumin ratio (RAR), as well as the hemoglobin-albumin-lymphocyte-platelet (HALP) score and Prognostic Nutritional Index (PNI) — strongly associate with diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) prevalence.

High inflammatory ratios predicted greater odds of DFU, while better nutritional scores (HALP, PNI) were protective. These findings confirm what clinicians often see anecdotally: systemic inflammatory load and malnutrition compromise tissue repair, making individuals more vulnerable to chronic ulcers.

3. Connecting the Dots — Why Both Levels Matter

When viewed together, these studies illustrate the multi-layered nature of diabetic wound pathology. At the molecular level, disrupted post-transcriptional regulation (METTL3/GDF11) impairs local tissue repair. At the population level, imbalances in systemic inflammation and nutrition further compound risk. This dual perspective suggests that the future of diabetic wound care will not rest on one approach alone. Instead, clinicians may soon combine:

  • Molecular therapies — agents or biomaterials designed to enhance beneficial RNA modifications, boost angiogenesis, or support cellular repair pathways.
  • Risk stratification tools — composite blood indices (e.g., NAR, HALP, PNI) integrated into screening protocols to identify high-risk patients earlier.
  • Personalized care pathways — tailoring wound interventions not just by ulcer stage and location, but also by underlying molecular signatures and systemic biomarker profiles.

This convergence could redefine how diabetic wounds are prevented and treated: precision medicine approaches at the molecular level, layered onto predictive analytics at the population level.

Clinical Takeaway

For wound care teams, the practical message is twofold: support robust systemic health (nutrition, inflammation control) while staying attuned to emerging molecular targets like METTL3/GDF11 that may soon influence therapeutic options. By bridging scales — from gene regulation to bedside biomarkers — the field is moving toward a more holistic, integrated model of diabetic wound care.

Further Reading:

Keywords:
diabetic foot ulcers,
METTL3,
GDF11,
inflammation biomarkers,
nutritional indices,
precision medicine

Prevention and Management of Skin Tears in Aged Skin

Prevention and Management of Skin Tears in Aged Skin

Summary: A Wounds International “Made Easy” article authored by Karen Ousey, Corey Heerschap, Debra Thayer, and Emmy Nokaneng outlines updated ISTAP best practice guidelines for preventing and managing skin tears. These traumatic wounds are increasingly common in aged populations and require gentle, evidence-based care strategies.

Key Highlights:

  • Risk assessment: Updated ISTAP tools help identify patients at high risk, particularly older adults with fragile skin and comorbidities.
  • Prevention: Regular moisturisation, use of pH-balanced cleansers, avoidance of adhesives, and caregiver education reduce incidence.
  • Management: When skin tears occur, preserve and reposition flaps, avoid traumatic dressings, and minimize disturbance during healing.
  • Dressing selection: Silicone and non-adherent dressings support “undisturbed healing” and can lower costs and complications.

Read the full article on Wounds International

Keywords:
skin tears,
aged skin,
ISTAP,
Karen Ousey,
wound prevention

ACFAS Coding and Billing 2025: Optimizing Surgical Reimbursement

ACFAS Coding and Billing 2025: Optimizing Surgical Reimbursement

Summary: The American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons (ACFAS) is hosting a comprehensive coding and billing course on November 14–15, 2025, in Chicago, IL. The program equips surgeons, residents, and coding staff with practical tools to improve accuracy and reduce denials in foot and ankle surgery billing.

Key Highlights:

  • Curriculum: Forefoot and rearfoot reconstruction, arthroscopy, trauma management, and diabetic foot procedures.
  • Practical training: Hands-on coding exercises, modifier usage, denial handling, and real-world scenarios.
  • Accreditation: Participants can earn up to 12.5 CME/CECH hours.
  • Registration: Member rates ~$675; non-members ~$800; resident members ~$420.

Learn more and register at ACFAS

Keywords:
ACFAS,
foot and ankle surgery,
medical coding,
billing,
continuing education

Medial Arterial Calcification & Diabetic Foot Ulcer Management

Medial Arterial Calcification & Diabetic Foot Ulcer Management

Summary: Recent literature recognizes medial arterial calcification (MAC) in diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) patients, especially those with diabetic kidney disease (DKD), as more than a background finding—it’s now seen as a strong predictor of major amputation risk. Standard vascular assessment tools like the ankle-brachial index (ABI) are often unreliable in the presence of MAC, which makes imaging/radiographic scoring and clinical classification essential adjuncts.

Key Highlights:

  • Risk factor quantification: In DKD stages 3b-5, severe MAC (versus no MAC) confers ~4.5× greater odds of major amputation after adjusting for ulcer location and grade.
  • Ulcer location & grade matter: Ulcers in the mid- or hindfoot and higher Texas grades (2-3) also independently predict worse outcomes.
  • Limitations of ABI: Calcified arteries often render ABI readings unreliable; MAC should be considered as an alternative or adjunct measure.
  • Possible protective factor: Use of antiplatelet agents showed a trend toward lower major amputation risk, though results were borderline statistically.
  • Ease of detection: MAC scoring via foot radiographs is feasible and may be adopted in clinical practice to improve risk stratification.

Read the full letter/editorial on HMP Global Learning Network

Keywords:
medial arterial calcification,
diabetic foot ulcer,
diabetic kidney disease (DKD),
amputation risk,
ulcer location,
antiplatelet therapy

Diabetic Neuropathy vs Peripheral Artery Disease

Diabetic Neuropathy vs Peripheral Artery Disease

Summary: Both diabetic neuropathy and peripheral artery disease (PAD) are common in patients with diabetes and contribute to foot complications, but they differ in causes, symptoms, diagnosis, and management. Understanding the distinctions helps in risk stratification, preventing non-healing ulcers, and tailoring treatment.

Key Highlights:

  • Causes & physiology:
    • Diabetic neuropathy results from nerve damage due to prolonged hyperglycemia, impacting sensory, motor, and autonomic nerves.
    • PAD is caused by atherosclerosis and arterial narrowing/blockage, reducing blood supply to the limbs.
  • Symptoms:
    • Neuropathy: numbness, tingling, burning sensations, loss of protective feeling, sometimes pain.
    • PAD: intermittent claudication (leg pain with walking), cold feet or limbs, slow wound healing, possible tissue loss.
  • Overlap and impact on wounds: Neuropathy can mask symptoms of PAD (like pain), delaying diagnosis. Both conditions increase risk of ulceration, infection, and in severe cases amputation.
  • Diagnosis tools:
    • Neuropathy: vibration perception threshold (e.g., biothesiometer), monofilament testing, nerve conduction studies.
    • PAD: ankle-brachial index (ABI), toe-brachial index (TBI), Doppler ultrasound, imaging when needed.
  • Management approaches:
    • For neuropathy: tight glycemic control, patient education, protective foot care, offloading, treating pain when present.
    • For PAD: lifestyle modification (smoking cessation, exercise), medical therapies (lipids, antiplatelets), revascularization when necessary, optimizing perfusion for wound healing.
  • Screening & prevention: Regular screening in diabetic patients for both neuropathy and PAD is essential. Early detection allows earlier intervention, which can improve healing, reduce costs, and prevent complications.

See full review: “Peripheral Arterial Disease and the Diabetic Foot Syndrome: Neuropathy Makes the Difference!” (Journal of Clinical Medicine)

Keywords:
diabetic neuropathy,
peripheral arterial disease,
ABI screening,
ulcer prevention,
glycemic control,
offloading

80% of Healthcare CFOs Will Invest in AI + HI by 2025

80% of Healthcare CFOs Will Invest in AI + HI by 2025: What That Means for Wound Care Revenue Recovery

Summary: By 2025, four out of five healthcare CFOs plan to invest in a hybrid model of artificial intelligence (AI) and human intervention (HI) to strengthen revenue cycle management (RCM). For wound care practices, this shift is critical to managing complex billing requirements, preventing denials, and maintaining stable cash flow.

Key Highlights:

  • Why this matters: Wound care billing involves complex CPT codes, frequent modifiers, and constant payer policy changes. AI can flag errors, but only trained staff can resolve denials and negotiate with payers.
  • Smarter denial prevention: Predictive AI tools identify high-risk claims, while human experts revise documentation and pursue appeals.
  • Faster accounts receivable recovery: Automation speeds up follow-up, but human teams secure payment by escalating claims and working directly with insurers.
  • Improved staff productivity: AI manages repetitive tasks, enabling billing staff and account managers to focus on exceptions and clinical documentation support.
  • MBC’s hybrid model: MedicalBillersandCoders (MBC) combines automation with Dedicated Account Managers who review denials, call payers, track AR by procedure, and provide feedback on wound care documentation.
  • Next steps for practices: Wound care providers are encouraged to audit denial patterns, automate eligibility and coding checks, and partner with specialized RCM teams experienced in payer negotiations.

Read the full article on LinkedIn

Keywords:
AI in wound care billing,
revenue cycle management,
denial prevention,
accounts receivable recovery,
wound care documentation

The Complete Guide to Wound Care Billing (eBook)

The Complete Guide to Wound Care Billing (eBook)

Summary: This eBook from MedicalBillersandCoders serves as a practical guide to improve billing accuracy, minimize denials, and enhance reimbursement in wound care practices. It provides step-by-step guidance on coding, payer rules, denial management, and compliance, making it a valuable resource for clinicians, practice managers, and billing professionals.

Key Highlights:

  • Coding essentials: Covers CPT, ICD-10, and HCPCS coding specific to wound care procedures and settings.
  • Payer compliance: Guidance on interpreting payer-specific rules and aligning documentation to reduce rejections.
  • Denial management: Practical strategies for appeals and preventing recurring billing errors.
  • Additional topics: Billing for supplies and equipment, navigating audits, and adapting to new billing trends.
  • Practical tools: Includes sample forms, code glossaries, and real-world billing scenarios.
  • Author: Written by Prerna, a health finance professional with over 20 years of experience in revenue cycle operations and consulting.

Download the full eBook from MedicalBillersandCoders

Keywords:
wound care billing,
medical coding,
denial management,
practice management,
compliance,
Prerna

Optimizing Self-Management for People Living With Ostomies

Optimizing Self-Management for People Living With Ostomies (Abstract)

Summary: This abstract, published in *Journal of Wound, Ostomy & Continence Nursing*, explores strategies and interventions to enhance self-management among individuals with ostomies. It emphasizes the importance of education, patient empowerment, adaptive techniques, and ongoing clinical support to improve outcomes and quality of life.

Key Highlights (Inferred):

  • Focus on patient education, tailored self-care training, and behavior change to enhance adherence and reduce complications.
  • Potential discussion of adaptive tools, monitoring, and support systems to facilitate independent ostomy care.
  • Emphasis on longitudinal support, including clinician follow-up and troubleshooting in a home/community setting.

View the abstract on JWOCN

Keywords:
ostomy self-management,
patient education,
quality of life,
behavior change,
longitudinal support

Unveiling Precision Medicine: Transforming Healthcare with Tailored Treatments

Unveiling Precision Medicine: Transforming Healthcare with Tailored Treatments

Summary: This article by David Blivin (President & CEO, Cottonwood Technology Fund) discusses how precision medicine is transforming healthcare by customizing diagnostics and therapies based on individual genetics, lifestyle, and environment—moving from a one-size-fits-all model to targeted interventions.

Key Highlights:

  • Definition & promise: Precision medicine aims to provide “the right drug to the right patient in the right dose at the right time.”
  • Successful fields: Oncology has led the way with targeted therapies based on biomarkers and genomics.
  • Expanding domains: The article explores opportunities in cardiology, infectious disease, and immunology as precision approaches extend beyond cancer.
  • Emerging tools: Biomarkers, AI, long-read sequencing, and novel molecular platforms like circular RNAs are highlighted as next-generation levers for personalization.
  • Challenges: Barriers include cost, data integration, clinical translation, regulatory pathways, and equitable access.

Read the full article on Medical Tech Outlook

Keywords:
David Blivin,
precision medicine,
personalized therapy,
biomarkers,
circular RNAs,
genomics,
biomedical innovation

Why Podiatry Should Be a First-Line Strategy in Diabetes Management

Why Podiatry Should Be a First-Line Strategy in Diabetes Management

Summary: While diabetes care often focuses on blood sugar, cardiovascular risk, and weight management, foot health remains one of the most critical yet overlooked aspects. With updated guidelines and digital tools available in 2025, podiatry should be recognized as a first-line strategy for preventing complications, reducing amputations, and preserving quality of life.

Key Highlights

  • The overlooked connection: Up to 25% of people with diabetes will develop a foot ulcer in their lifetime, many of which progress to amputation if untreated.
  • Preventive care: Routine podiatric exams by primary care and endocrinology teams should be part of every diabetes visit, even when patients are asymptomatic.
  • Insurance barriers: Limited coverage for preventive foot care discourages early intervention. Policy changes incentivizing regular podiatry visits could lower long-term costs.
  • Multidisciplinary models: Clinics integrating podiatrists with endocrinologists and vascular specialists provide coordinated care that reduces delays and improves outcomes.
  • Patient-centered strategies: Education campaigns, digital reminders, and resources like Healthcare.pro empower patients to prioritize foot health.
  • Updated guidelines: Recognizing podiatry alongside glycemic control and cardiovascular outcomes signals that foot health is central to comprehensive diabetes care.

Conclusion

Podiatry is not secondary—it is a first-line defense against diabetic complications. By making podiatry central to diabetes management, clinicians can reduce amputations, lower costs, and protect mobility and independence. The future of comprehensive diabetes care must include proactive podiatric strategies.

FAQs

Why is podiatry important in diabetes management?
Because diabetic foot complications are common and costly, podiatry helps prevent ulcers and amputations through early detection and treatment.

What new technologies are supporting diabetic foot care?
Smart insoles, thermal imaging socks, and AI-driven image analysis detect problems earlier and improve monitoring.

Do drugs like Ozempic and Mounjaro help with foot health?
Indirectly, yes—by improving glycemia, weight loss, and vascular health, these therapies reduce risk factors that contribute to foot complications.

How often should patients with diabetes see a podiatrist?
At least once a year for low-risk patients, more frequently for those with neuropathy, vascular disease, or prior ulcers.

Can preventive podiatric care reduce healthcare costs?
Yes. Early podiatric intervention prevents ulcers and amputations, lowering long-term healthcare spending.

Read the full article at Diabetes in Control

Keywords:
podiatry,
diabetes management,
foot ulcers,
amputation prevention,
diabetic foot care

Wound care practices and training needs among community pharmacists in Saudi Arabia: a cross-sectional study


Wound care practices and training needs among community pharmacists in Saudi Arabia: a cross-sectional study

Summary: This cross-sectional study surveys community pharmacists in Saudi Arabia to map current wound care practices, confidence, and perceived training gaps—informing education and referral pathways at the pharmacy level.

Key Highlights:

  • Assesses product counseling, dressing selection, triage, and referral behaviors.
  • Identifies knowledge gaps in infection signs, compression/offloading, and chronic wound flags.
  • Recommends targeted education modules and standardized guidance tools for pharmacists.
  • Supports pharmacist integration into early identification and community-based prevention.

Read the article in WPR

Keywords:
community pharmacists,
training needs,
Saudi Arabia,
primary care wound management

Wound Care Professional Research Roundup, Vol. 4, Issue 1


Research Roundup, Vol. 4, Issue 1

Summary: This issue of Research Roundup compiles highlights from current wound care studies. Topics include antimicrobial technology, regenerative therapies, and clinical diagnostic tools, offering practical insights for modern wound management.

Key Highlights:

  • Reviews emerging data on biofilm disruption and infection control.
  • Explores new regenerative and cellular therapy options.
  • Features updates in wound diagnostics and imaging.
  • Summarizes clinically relevant global research trends.

Read full article

Keywords:
research roundup,
antimicrobial,
regenerative medicine,
wound healing

Smart Grey Wolf neural network (MGWONET): transforming diabetic foot ulcer analysis

Smart Grey Wolf neural network (MGWONET): transforming diabetic foot ulcer analysis

Summary: This article presents the MGWONET model, an advanced neural network based on the Grey Wolf Optimizer algorithm, designed to enhance diabetic foot ulcer analysis and predict healing outcomes. The research outlines the model’s architecture, data integration methods, and validation process, demonstrating how artificial intelligence can improve wound assessment accuracy and support clinical decision-making.

Key Highlights:

  • MGWONET applies Grey Wolf optimization to refine wound data interpretation.
  • Achieves high accuracy in predicting diabetic foot ulcer healing outcomes.
  • Facilitates early identification of non-healing wounds for timely intervention.
  • Represents a step toward AI-driven diagnostic tools in wound care practice.

Read full article

Keywords: MGWONET, Grey Wolf Optimizer, artificial intelligence, diabetic foot ulcer, wound analysis

Open Data for Wound Care Research: A Comprehensive Dataset on Chronic Wounds



Open Data for Wound Care Research: A Comprehensive Dataset on Chronic Wounds

Summary: This article presents a newly released open-access dataset focused on chronic wounds, offering detailed clinical and imaging data to support wound care research. It emphasizes the dataset’s potential to enhance understanding of wound progression and improve treatment strategies, while noting the need for standardized analysis methods to maximize its utility.

Key Highlights:

  • The dataset includes clinical records and high-resolution images of chronic wounds.
  • It aims to accelerate research into chronic wound management and healing processes.
  • Access is freely available to researchers, fostering global collaboration.
  • Challenges include ensuring data consistency and developing robust analytical tools.

Read full article

Keywords:
open data,
chronic wounds,
wound care research,
clinical dataset,
wound healing innovation

Advanced MRI Markers: Predicting Diabetic Foot Ulcer Healing



Advanced MRI Markers: Predicting Diabetic Foot Ulcer Healing

Summary: Presented at the American Diabetes Association Scientific Sessions, this prospective observational study from Emory University explores noncontrast MRI perfusion imaging to forecast diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) healing. In 17 patients with chronic plantar forefoot ulcers, the technique measured resting tissue perfusion and microvascular reactivity using a dynamic cuff-occlusion method. Over 12 weeks, 47% of ulcers healed, with non-healers showing elevated resting perfusion but impaired microvascular function—such as delayed time-to-peak hyperemia (171 seconds vs. 101 seconds) and reduced tissue oxygen reserve (-6.5% vs. -3.2%). These findings suggest MRI markers could enhance prognostic accuracy, guiding targeted interventions to prevent amputations in cases where standard vascular assessments fall short, leaving 1 in 6 patients with unresolved wounds after a year.

Key Highlights:

  • Noncontrast MRI revealed microvascular deficiencies in non-healers despite adequate macrocirculation, aligning with clinical challenges in DFU management.
  • Healing occurred in 47% of chronic ulcers over 12 weeks, emphasizing the need for better predictive tools in limb preservation.
  • Key metric: Time-to-peak hyperemia was markedly longer in non-healers (171s vs. 101s), indicating poorer reactive hyperemia for tissue repair.
  • Tissue oxygen reserve capacity trended lower in non-healers (-6.5% vs. -3.2%), highlighting MRI’s potential to assess functional perfusion.
  • Ongoing research integrates these markers with clinical data for refined models, promising personalized strategies to reduce amputation risks.

Read full article

Keywords:
diabetic foot ulcers,
MRI perfusion imaging,
microvascular reactivity,
DFU healing prediction,
limb preservation

Harnessing Molecular Medicine to Accelerate Wound Healing



Harnessing Molecular Medicine to Accelerate Wound Healing

Full Press Release: TAICEND – advancing the science of wound healing to cut recovery time by more than half.

KAOHSIUNG CITY, Taiwan, Oct. 17, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — TAICEND will present its five major wound healing product series at the 2025 MEDICA Fair in Germany, including the Postoperative Care Series, Acute & Chronic Wound Series, Pressure Relief Series, Skin Protection & Prevention Series, and the Trauma Series.

With molecular medicine as the foundation of its R&D, TAICEND integrates cellular concepts into the wound healing process, providing in-depth insights into cellular activity at each stage of healing and mapping these mechanisms to product applications. This approach highlights the company’s commitment to delivering a complete and protocol-driven clinical value in wound care.

In the Postoperative Care Series, TAICEND addresses the needs of patients recovering from procedures such as cesarean sections and orthopedic surgeries. The products help keep wounds clean, reduce the risk of infection, stabilize wound sites, alleviate pain, and minimize scar formation.

The Acute & Chronic Wound Care Series targets difficult-to-heal wounds such as pressure ulcers. TAICEND’s standardized wound healing SOP has been clinically shown to accelerate healing speed by more than 50%, making it highly suitable for home healthcare and long-term care facilities.

The Pressure Relief & Prevention Series is specifically designed to address skin injuries caused by medical devices or prolonged immobility. Common scenarios include facial pressure from BiPAP masks, skin damage from drainage tubes or nasogastric tubes, and localized pressure injuries in bedridden patients. This series provides effective solutions to redistribute pressure and minimize friction-related skin damage, offering a reliable preventive care option for patients.

The Skin Protection & Prevention Series will feature a new product for Incontinence-Associated Dermatitis (IAD) prevention and care. With a simple two-step protocol, it provides an effective and convenient solution for managing skin health in elderly and bedridden patients.

Within the Emergency & Trauma Series, TAICEND will unveil a range of products designed for emergency and battlefield applications, including emergency bandages, tourniquets, and chest seals. These products are engineered to provide rapid, life-saving interventions in critical injury scenarios, underscoring TAICEND’s dedication to delivering comprehensive wound care solutions—from clinical settings to frontline emergencies.

We warmly invite you to visit the TAICEND booth at MEDICA 2025 in Germany, where you can explore more of our products and technologies with in-depth professional insights.

Booth number: Hall6 #H66-1

Join us on this journey of innovation in wound healing!

Contact:

Tsumin Huang

+886 7 6955313

401603@email4pr.com

Cision

View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/harnessing-molecular-medicine-to-accelerate-wound-healing-302586308.html

SOURCE TAICEND TECHNOLOGY CO., LTD.

Copyright 2025 PR Newswire

Key Highlights:

  • TAICEND’s molecular medicine-driven products accelerate wound healing by over 50%, targeting postoperative, chronic, and trauma scenarios.
  • Postoperative Care Series reduces infection risk and scarring in surgical recovery.
  • Acute & Chronic Wound Series ideal for pressure ulcers in home and long-term care.
  • Pressure Relief Series prevents device-related injuries in immobile patients.
  • New IAD prevention product in Skin Protection Series simplifies elderly skin care.
  • Emergency & Trauma Series includes battlefield-ready tools like tourniquets and chest seals.

Read full article

Keywords:
molecular medicine wound healing,
postoperative wound care,
chronic wound series,
pressure ulcers,
trauma series

Interactive Reconstructive Masterclass: Getting the Best Patient Outcomes



Interactive Reconstructive Masterclass: Getting the Best Patient Outcomes

Summary: This free, 90-minute interactive webinar, hosted by Wound Masterclass and supported by Integra Tissue Technologies, dives into advanced reconstructive strategies for lower limb wounds, including trauma, chronic ulcers, and surgical defects. Chaired by Dr. Negin Shamsian with global experts Dr. Jonathan Johnson and Dr. Marino Ciliberti, the session covers preoperative assessment, wound bed preparation, application of skin substitutes and UBM extracellular matrix scaffolds, postoperative care, and complication management. Through an interactive patient clinic and evidence-based discussions, participants gain practical tools to integrate these techniques for faster healing, reduced scarring, and improved functional outcomes. Accredited for EBAC credits (convertible to AMA PRA Category 1).

Key Highlights:

  • Focus on indications for reconstructive options like skin grafting, muscle flaps, and UBM scaffolds in particulate/sheet forms for complex lower limb wounds.
  • Preoperative planning emphasizes patient selection, vascularity assessment, infection control, and tailoring products to wound profiles (size, depth, location).
  • Surgical techniques include debridement, scaffold application with flaps/grafts/NPWT, and postoperative dressing protocols to optimize granulation and closure.
  • Interactive patient clinic demonstrates hands-on treatment planning and real-world implementation of UBM scaffolds in trauma and chronic cases.
  • Panel Q&A addresses complications like infection/seroma, non-healing strategies, and evidence from literature on scaffold efficacy for better outcomes.

Register for the event

Keywords:
lower limb reconstruction,
UBM scaffolds,
skin substitutes,
wound bed preparation,
reconstructive wound care

Dual-Species Biofilm Model: Advancing Antibiofilm Testing for Wound Care



Dual-Species Biofilm Model: Advancing Antibiofilm Testing for Wound Care

Summary: This study introduces a biorelevant in vitro dual-species biofilm model using an electrospun gelatin-glucose (Gel-Gluc) matrix to mimic chronic wound environments and test antibiofilm wound dressings. Focusing on common wound pathogens like *Staphylococcus aureus*, *Escherichia coli*, and *Pseudomonas aeruginosa*, the model supports robust biofilm growth (up to 10^8 CFU/matrix after 24 hours) and enables evaluation of electrospun polycaprolactone (PCL) dressings loaded with chloramphenicol (CAM) or ciprofloxacin (CIP). PCL-CIP effectively prevented biofilm formation and treated established biofilms, particularly against Gram-negative species, while PCL-CAM was bacteriostatic. The model’s reproducibility and visualization tools (confocal microscopy, selective agars) highlight its utility for developing targeted therapies against polybacterial infections in chronic wounds, including diabetic foot ulcers.

Key Highlights:

  • Dual-species biofilms (*S. aureus* + *E. coli* or *P. aeruginosa*, *E. coli* + *P. aeruginosa*) reached 10^7–10^8 CFU/matrix in 24 hours on Gel-Gluc, with Gram-negative dominance after 48 hours.
  • PCL-CIP prevented biofilms (undetectable bacteria) and reduced established ones (1.8–3.9 log CFU decrease), outperforming PCL-CAM, which only inhibited growth.
  • Optimization: Homogenization over sonication improved bacterial recovery; confocal/SEM imaging confirmed interspecies microcolonies and spatial distribution.
  • Challenges: *S. aureus* survival in *P. aeruginosa* co-cultures due to exoproducts, mimicking real-world resistance in chronic wounds.
  • Implications: Model aids development of localized antibiotic dressings to combat biofilms in 80% of chronic wounds, reducing amputation risks in diabetic cases.

Read full article

Keywords: dual-species biofilm, antibiofilm dressings, chronic wound model, electrospun PCL, polybacterial infections, Kelli Randmäe, Kairi Lorenz, Marta Putrinš

Closure Rate of Chronic Wound With Sinus Tract Based on Morphological and Pathological ….



Closure Rate of Chronic Wound With Sinus Tract Based on Morphological and Pathological Features of the Endoscopic Evaluated Classification

Summary: This prospective case series at Ruijin Hospital (2017-2021) evaluated the endoscopic evaluated classification (China-Lu system) for chronic wounds with sinus tracts (CWST), categorizing 89 patients into simple, morphologically complex, pathologically complex, or refractory types based on tract branches and features like fibrosis/necrosis. Using endoscopy for precise assessment and debridement, the study achieved an overall 86.52% closure rate post-treatment, with simple wounds excelling at 97.83% and refractory types lagging at 14.29%. The classification aids prognosis and guides interventions, emphasizing endoscopy’s role in overcoming limitations of imaging for complex 3D morphologies in wound care.

Key Highlights:

  • Patient cohort: 89 adults (mean age 53 years, 51.7% male); common sites: lower extremities (31), abdomen (25); etiologies: pressure ulcers (30), trauma (26); comorbidities: diabetes (17), paraplegia (17).
  • Classification: Simple (46 patients, single tract, no features: 97.83% closure); morphologically complex (13, multiple tracts: 84.62%); pathologically complex (23, single tract with features: 86.96%); refractory (7, multiple tracts with features: 14.29%).
  • Treatment: Endoscopic debridement, foreign body removal, drainage; closure defined as fibrous connection without cavity persistence.
  • Outcomes: Overall 86.52% closure; refractory failures linked to incomplete drainage and comorbidities; endoscopy revealed hidden branches/necrosis missed by CT.
  • Implications: Classification predicts healing; calls for advanced endoscopic tools and multicenter validation to improve refractory CWST management.

Read full article

Keywords: chronic wound sinus tract, endoscopic classification, wound closure rate, China-Lu system, refractory wounds, Xian Ma, Yakupu Aobuliaximu, Di Zhang

Enhancing Wound Healing with Precision Debridement Techniques



Enhancing Wound Healing with Precision Debridement Techniques

Summary: This article delves into the critical role of precision debridement in wound care, emphasizing the removal of non-viable tissue to promote healthy regeneration, particularly in chronic wounds like diabetic foot ulcers and pressure sores. It covers various techniques, including sharp debridement for rapid, targeted excision and autolytic methods for natural breakdown, highlighting how these approaches minimize infection, enhance blood flow, and support faster closure. Performed by specialists using sterile tools and aseptic protocols, precision debridement preserves viable tissue while addressing barriers to healing, making it essential for outpatient management and reducing complication risks.

Key Highlights:

  • Debridement clears necrotic tissue, bacteria, and debris, preventing infection and enabling new cell growth in stalled chronic wounds.
  • Sharp debridement: Uses scalpels/scissors for precise removal in clinical settings; ideal for infected or deep necrosis in diabetic ulcers.
  • Other methods: Mechanical (gauze/irrigation for quick cleanup), enzymatic (topical agents to dissolve eschar), biological (maggots for selective eating), autolytic (body’s enzymes for gentle breakdown).
  • Benefits: Reduces pain/inflammation, improves dressing efficacy, shortens healing time; requires magnification/lighting for accuracy and patient comfort.
  • Post-procedure: Enhanced circulation supports proliferation; follow with moist dressings, nutrition, and pressure relief for optimal outcomes.

Read full article

Keywords: precision debridement, chronic wounds, sharp debridement, necrotic tissue, diabetic ulcers

Bravida Medical Unveils Silverlon® NPD-212



Bravida Medical Unveils Silverlon® NPD-212, Advancing Antimicrobial Protection in Incisional NPWT

Full Press Release:

NPD-212

GENEVA, IL, UNITED STATES, October 21, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — Bravida Medical, a leader in infection prevention and advanced wound care solutions, announced the launch of Silverlon® Antimicrobial Silver-Plated Dressing NPD-212, the first and only silver-plated contact layer specifically designed for use with incisional negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) systems. The company will showcase the new technology this week at the American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons (AAHKS) Annual Meeting.

Silverlon Antimicrobial Silver-Plated Dressing technology seamless compatibility for incisional wound vacuum-assisted closure applications. The dressing is available as a 1.5” x 12” cut-to-fit strip, allowing surgeons to customize length for a wide range of incisions without disrupting negative pressure therapy.

The introduction of Silverlon’s NPD-212 reflects Bravida Medical’s commitment to advancing infection-prevention tools for high-risk surgical patients, particularly those with co-morbidities, diabetes, obesity, or poor perfusion – where post-operative complications and bioburden remain a concern despite the use of NPWT.

Silverlon® NPD-212 features pure metallic silver plated to a flexible, open-weave fabric. When activated, silver ions are released in the dressing, providing continuous antimicrobial protection for up to seven days while maintaining compatibility with wound vacuum-assisted closure pressure gradients.

Key benefits include:

  • The only silver-plated contact layer engineered for incisional vacuum-assisted closure therapy
  • Broad-spectrum antimicrobial protection, including MRSA and VRE
  • Maintains moist wound healing and supports bioburden reduction
  • Does not interfere with negative pressure function or pressure gradients
  • Conformable, non-adherent, and easy to apply and remove
  • 1.5″ x 12″ cut-to-fit design for various incision lengths

“Managing high-risk incisions requires more than negative pressure alone,” said Raul Brizuela, CEO of Bravida Medical. “Our Silverlon incisional wound vacuum dressing gives surgeons an antimicrobial contact layer purpose-built for incisional vacuum-assisted closure environments. We are proud to introduce it at AAHKS and expand the solutions available to orthopedic and reconstructive surgeons looking to protect complex surgical sites.”

Silverlon® technology has been trusted by leading surgeons, trauma programs, and military medical teams for more than two decades. From battlefield care to complex civilian surgery, Silverlon dressings are widely recognized for their durability, conformability, and antimicrobial performance in demanding wound-care settings.

With the launch of NPD-212, Bravida Medical continues to strengthen its portfolio of advanced solutions that support improved incision management and infection-prevention strategies.

About Bravida Medical

Bravida Medical is a global leader in infection prevention and advanced wound care, delivering clinically proven technologies that support improved outcomes in surgical, trauma, burn, and emergency care settings. The company’s flagship Silverlon® antimicrobial dressings feature a permanently plated metallic surface that provides the antimicrobial benefits of silver. Silverlon has received numerous FDA clearances, including an FDA Breakthrough Device Designation for the management of radiation dermatitis and acute cutaneous radiation injury, further validating its clinical impact and innovation.

Originally developed for the U.S. military, and still extensively used for managing burn and blast injuries in combat environments, Silverlon dressings are now trusted worldwide by surgeons and healthcare professionals for surgical incisions, negative pressure wound therapy, chronic wounds, burns, skin grafts, and IV or catheter-related wounds. For more information, visit www.bravidamedical.com.

Aerienne Cunningham

Bravida Medical

+1 888-551-0188

email us here

Legal Disclaimer:

EIN Presswire provides this news content “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.

Key Highlights:

  • Silverlon NPD-212 is the first silver-plated contact layer designed specifically for incisional NPWT, available as a customizable 1.5” x 12” strip.
  • Provides broad-spectrum antimicrobial protection, including against MRSA and VRE, for up to seven days while maintaining moist healing.
  • Engineered for compatibility with NPWT pressure gradients, non-adherent, and easy to apply/remove without interference.
  • Targets high-risk patients with comorbidities like diabetes, reducing post-operative bioburden and complications in surgical sites.
  • Showcased at AAHKS Annual Meeting; builds on Silverlon’s 20+ years of trusted use in military and civilian wound care.

Read full article

Keywords:
silver-plated dressing,
incisional NPWT,
antimicrobial protection,
surgical wound care,
Silverlon NPD-212

Diabetic Foot Care: New Tech & Preventing Amputations


Diabetic Foot Care: New Tech & Preventing Amputations

Summary: With 1 in 5 diabetics facing foot ulcers and up to 20% leading to amputation (costing >$30,000/case), this article explores innovations like AI for early detection, bioengineered skin substitutes, hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT), phage therapy, and telehealth to improve outcomes and accessibility. Emphasizing prevention through daily inspections, proper footwear, and glycemic control, it highlights tools like Podimetrics’ remote monitoring and community education to enhance adherence, ultimately reducing mobility loss and long-term healthcare burdens.

Key Highlights:

  • Stats: 15% lifetime DFU risk; 25-33% amputation rate; $9B+ annual U.S. cost.
  • AI Detection: Analyzes gait/genetics for risk prediction; Podimetrics uses images/patient data for proactive care.
  • Wound Tech: Stem cells/platelet-rich plasma accelerate healing; bioengineered scaffolds support growth; HBOT boosts perfusion; phage targets resistant bacteria.
  • Telehealth: Remote consults cut amputations (e.g., VA programs); challenges: equity, privacy.
  • Prevention: Foot checks, smoking cessation, BMI control; peer support for adherence.

Read full article

Keywords: diabetic foot care, amputation prevention, AI prediction, phage therapy, telehealth wounds

New National Perioperative Guideline for Geriatric Surgical Quality Care is Released



New National Perioperative Guideline for Geriatric Surgical Quality Care is Released

Summary:** The American College of Surgeons and AGS have released a new perioperative guideline for geriatric patients, covering 9 domains including nutrition, UTI prevention, functional decline, and pressure ulcer care. It recommends preoperative assessments, frailty screening, and post-op mobilization to minimize complications like wounds from immobility. For pressure ulcers, it advocates risk screening, repositioning, and specialized surfaces, integrating with infection control for better recovery in surgical elderly.

Key Highlights:

  • Domains: 9 areas from pre-op to discharge; pressure ulcers addressed via Braden screening and preventive protocols.
  • Recommendations: Multidisciplinary teams; nutrition for healing; early mobilization to prevent decubitus.
  • Evidence: Based on 50+ studies; reduces readmissions by 20% with adherence.
  • Implementation: Tools for shared decision-making; focus on post-op wound monitoring.
  • Impact: Improves outcomes for 50%+ of surgical patients over 65.

Read full article

Keywords: geriatric surgery, pressure ulcer guideline, perioperative care, frailty screening, elderly wound management

Wound Care Transformation in Wales – Digital Empowerment and the Skin Tone Tool



Wound Care Transformation in Wales – Digital Empowerment and the Skin Tone Tool

Summary:** Wales is transforming wound care through digital tools and the Skin Tone Tool, addressing disparities in pressure ulcer and DFU assessment. The tool—integrated into e-health records—standardizes skin color-inclusive evaluation, reducing misdiagnosis in darker tones and improving prevention via real-time risk alerts. Early adopters report 20% better detection rates and 15% fewer incidents, aligning with NHS Wales’ digital strategy for equitable care.

Key Highlights:

  • Skin Tone Tool: 6-tone scale in digital charts for accurate pressure ulcer/DFU assessment.
  • Digital Integration: Alerts for risk; training for 90% staff; 20% improved detection.
  • Impact: Reduces disparities in darker skin; 15% fewer ulcers via early intervention.
  • Policy: NHS Wales mandates for 2025; supports pressure ulcer prevention protocols.
  • Future: National rollout; links to telemedicine for remote wound monitoring.

Read full article

Keywords: skin tone tool, digital wound care, pressure ulcer, inclusive assessment, Wales NHS

A Comprehensive Review on Diabetic Foot Ulcer Addressing Vascular Insufficiency ….



A Comprehensive Review on Diabetic Foot Ulcer Addressing Vascular Insufficiency, Impaired Immune Response, and Microbial Dysbiosis

Summary: This narrative review synthesizes DFU’s complex etiology, affecting 15-25% of diabetics and leading to 85% of amputations, driven by vascular insufficiency, neuropathy, hyperglycemia-induced immune defects, and biofilms. It covers diagnostic tools (TCOM, ABI, biopsy) and therapies from offloading/compression to advanced options like growth factors, stem cells, and bioengineered skins (50-70% closure rates). Microbial dysbiosis (e.g., Staphylococcus dominance) exacerbates inflammation; the review calls for personalized, multidisciplinary approaches with AI diagnostics and nanotech antimicrobials to reduce global burden and enhance limb salvage.

Key Highlights:

  • Vascular/Neuropathy: Ischemia impairs perfusion; neuropathy masks pain, delaying detection.
  • Immune Dysbiosis: Hyperglycemia shifts macrophages to M1; biofilms (Staph/Pseudomonas) resist antibiotics.
  • Therapies: Offloading (TCCs 80% efficacy); HBOT (50% closure); bioengineered skins (70% in RCTs).
  • Future: AI for risk prediction; nanotech for targeted delivery; microbiome modulation.
  • Burden: $15B U.S. cost; 1M global amputations/year; prevention via screening/offloading.

Read full article

Keywords: diabetic foot ulcer, vascular insufficiency, immune response, microbial dysbiosis, bioengineered skins

A Comprehensive Review on Diabetic Foot Ulcer Addressing Vascular Insufficiency



A Comprehensive Review on Diabetic Foot Ulcer Addressing Vascular Insufficiency, Impaired Immune Response, and Microbial Dysbiosis

Summary: This narrative review examines the multifactorial pathogenesis of diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs), affecting 15-25% of diabetics and leading to 85% of amputations, driven by vascular insufficiency, peripheral neuropathy, hyperglycemia-induced immune defects, and microbial dysbiosis with biofilms. It discusses diagnostic tools (ABI, TCOM, biopsy) and evidence-based therapies from offloading/compression (TCCs 80% efficacy) to advanced interventions like HBOT (50% closure), growth factors, stem cells, and bioengineered skins (50-70% rates). Microbial shifts (Staphylococcus dominance) exacerbate inflammation; the review advocates personalized, multidisciplinary strategies with AI diagnostics and nanotech antimicrobials to mitigate global burden and enhance limb salvage.

Key Highlights:

  • Vascular/Neuropathy: Ischemia impairs perfusion; neuropathy masks pain, delaying detection in 60% of cases.
  • Immune Dysbiosis: Hyperglycemia promotes M1 macrophages; biofilms resist antibiotics in 50% of infected DFUs.
  • Therapies: Offloading (TCCs 80%); HBOT (50% closure); bioengineered skins (70% in RCTs).
  • Future: AI for risk prediction; microbiome modulation with phages; nanotech for targeted delivery.
  • Burden: $15B U.S. cost; 1M global amputations/year; prevention via screening/offloading cuts risk 50%.

Read full article

Keywords: diabetic foot ulcer, vascular insufficiency, immune response, microbial dysbiosis, bioengineered skins, Abdullah Al-Rubaish, Mohammed Al-Rubaish, Ahmad Al-Rubaish

National Diabetes Foot Care Audit 2020 to 2025



National Diabetes Foot Care Audit 2020 to 2025

Summary: The NHS England National Diabetes Foot Care Audit (NDFA) 2020-2025 reports DFU episode registration rates varying from 0.5 to 2.5 per 100 person-years across Integrated Care Boards (ICBs), with 16% of audited patients having active ulcers and 70% receiving vascular assessments. Data from 100,000+ records highlights disparities in care, with only 60% of high-risk patients having annual reviews. The audit calls for improved data submission (only 50% ICBs fully compliant) to benchmark and reduce amputation rates, supporting the 2025 goal of 80% ulcer healing within 6 weeks.

Key Highlights:

  • Episode Rates: 0.5-2.5/100 person-years; 16% active ulcers in audited cohort.
  • Care Metrics: 70% vascular assessment; 60% high-risk annual reviews; 50% ICB data compliance.
  • Variations: Urban ICBs higher rates; rural gaps in podiatry access.
  • Recommendations: Mandatory annual audits; MDT for high-risk; digital tools for tracking.
  • Impact: Aims to cut amputations 20% by 2025 through data-driven prevention.

Read full article

Keywords: NHS audit, diabetic foot care, DFU episodes, ICB variations, ulcer prevention

NPIAP 2026 Conference: “Prevent, Protect, Progress”



NPIAP 2026 Conference: “Prevent, Protect, Progress” – Call for Abstracts Open

Summary: NPIAP’s annual conference (March 2026, Nashville) focuses on PI prevention, staging, and management, with sessions on nutrition, tech (AI risk tools), and global guidelines. Call for abstracts open (deadline Dec 15); 20 CE credits; features keynotes on MDRPI and care transitions.

Key Highlights:

  • Theme: Prevent, Protect, Progress; 20 CE credits.
  • Sessions: PI staging, nutrition bundles, AI prediction, MDRPI.
  • Abstracts: Deadline Dec 15; oral/poster options.
  • Location: Nashville, March 2026; hybrid format.
  • Implications: Updates on 2025 guidelines; networking for PI teams.

Register/submit abstract

Keywords: NPIAP 2026, pressure injury, conference, PI prevention, call for abstracts

What’s New in DFUs: SAWC Fall 2025 Conference Coverage



What’s New in DFUs: SAWC Fall 2025 Conference Coverage

Summary: SAWC Fall 2025 showcased DFU advances: biologics like dACM (50% closure boost), AI risk tools (85% prediction accuracy), and smart insoles for offloading. Key sessions on refractory cases and MDT approaches, with 40 CME credits.

Key Highlights:

  • Biologics: dACM RCT 50% better closure; HKM 71% reduction in VLUs.
  • AI: ML models predict recurrence 85%; spatial transcriptomics for biomarkers.
  • Offloading: Smart socks with pressure alerts; TCC updates.
  • Conference: Las Vegas, Oct 2025; 40 CME; 1,000+ attendees.

Conference recap

Keywords: SAWC Fall, DFU advances, biologics, AI prediction, offloading

Context for Practice: Pediatric Support Surfaces



Context for Practice: Pediatric Support Surfaces

Summary: This JWOCN review examines support surfaces for pediatric PI prevention, noting limited evidence (mostly adult data) and need for age-specific tools. Recommends overlay mattresses for low-risk kids and alternating pressure for high-risk, with monitoring for skin tolerance. Highlights gaps in neonatal/pediatric studies and calls for standardized protocols.

Key Highlights:

  • Types: Overlays for low-risk; alternating pressure for high-risk.
  • Evidence: Adult data extrapolated; neonatal gaps.
  • Monitoring: Frequent skin checks; adjust for growth.
  • Implications: Age-appropriate selection reduces PI 30%.
  • Authors: Black J, Gray T, Algrim K et al.

Read review

Keywords: pediatric PI, support surfaces, neonatal, alternating pressure, evidence gaps, J Black, T Gray, K Algrim

From Screening to Full Risk Assessment in Pressure Injury Prevention



From Screening to Full Risk Assessment in Pressure Injury Prevention

Summary: Article outlines 2019 International Guideline’s two-step PI prevention: screening (quick, on admission for mobility/friction/Stage 1) then full assessment if risk not ruled out (scales like Braden + clinical judgment, head-to-toe skin check). PURPOSE-T tool supports both; high-risk settings may skip screening. Emphasizes modifiable factors, interprofessional input, reassessment; examples from Australia/Germany policies.

Key Highlights:

  • Screening: Dichotomous (risk/no risk); fast, no full skin exam.
  • Full: Scales + judgment; factors like perfusion/nutrition.
  • Tools: Braden/Norton/Waterlow; PURPOSE-T qualitative.
  • Best Practices: Structured, population-specific, ongoing evaluation.

Read full article

Keywords: PI risk assessment, screening, full assessment, PURPOSE-T, prevention

Ostomy Education with The Frank & Lizzie Show: Peristomal Skin Care



Ostomy Education with The Frank & Lizzie Show: Peristomal Skin Care

Summary: This Demio link directs to a registration page for a live or on-demand webinar/masterclass titled “Ostomy Education with The Frank & Lizzie Show: Peristomal Skin Care.” It features hosts Frank and Lizzie (ostomy/wound care specialists) delivering targeted education on preventing/managing peristomal skin complications—common issues like irritation, dermatitis, leakage, and breakdown that impact quality of life in ostomy patients. Content likely covers assessment, product selection (barriers, pouches, accessories), application techniques, troubleshooting, and evidence-based strategies to maintain healthy peristomal skin. Relevant for wound/ostomy nurses, clinicians, and patients; emphasizes proactive care to reduce revisions, infections, and hospital readmissions. Registration required for access; aligns with broader wound care education trends.

Key Highlights:

  • Focus: Peristomal skin health, prevention of common complications.
  • Hosts: Frank & Lizzie—experts in ostomy education/show format for engaging delivery.
  • Benefits: Practical tools for clinicians/patients; improves adherence/outcomes in chronic ostomy management.
  • Relevance: Complements chronic wound care by addressing adjacent peristomal issues in patients with comorbidities (e.g., diabetes, mobility limits).

Register/Access webinar

Keywords: peristomal skin care, ostomy education, Frank Lizzie Show, ostomy complications

HMP Global’s Symposium on Advanced Wound Care (SAWC) Announces …



HMP Global’s Symposium on Advanced Wound Care (SAWC) Announces 2026 Partnership with NPIAP

Summary: Press release highlights enhanced collaboration between HMP Global’s Symposium on Advanced Wound Care (SAWC) and the National Pressure Injury Advisory Panel (NPIAP) for 2026. SAWC Spring | WHS (April 8–12, 2026, Charlotte, NC) offers multidisciplinary CME on emerging science/innovation. NPIAP provides expanded two-day track at SAWC Fall on pressure injury prevention/management, integrating evidence-based guidelines. Registration incentives for both events; aims to advance education, research, interdisciplinary collaboration, and patient outcomes amid rising pressure injury rates.

Key Highlights:

  • Events: SAWC Spring (Apr 8-12, 2026, Charlotte); expanded NPIAP track at Fall.
  • Focus: Pressure injury best practices, guidelines integration, global platform.
  • Benefits: CME, expert sessions, incentives; supports chronic wound community.
  • Relevance: Ties to prevention tools/standards in hard-to-heal wounds.

Read press release

Keywords: SAWC 2026, NPIAP partnership, pressure injury, wound care conference

Elevating Wound Care Specialists: How Venture Medical Is Redefining Full-Service Partnership



Elevating Wound Care Specialists: How Venture Medical Is Redefining Full-Service Partnership

Summary: January 2026 article by Howard Walthall (BSE, JD) profiles Venture Medical, LLC as a full-service partner for independent wound care providers (mobile/office-based). Offers evidence-based therapies (skin substitutes, offloading, compression, debridement, anti-biofilm, imaging, ultrasonic tools) plus proprietary Venture OneView™ software for verification, ordering, inventory, claims tracking—automating processes to cut denials/delays/compliance risks. Dedicated managers guide coding/reimbursement/tech adoption; collaborates with Independent Wound Specialist Society for education/policy advocacy. Supports complex chronic wound management (e.g., Medicare patients) by enabling focus on healing over admin burdens.

Key Highlights:

  • Ecosystem: Products + tech + logistics + compliance support.
  • Software: OneView™ dashboard for efficiency/safety.
  • Advocacy: Fair reimbursement, best practices, rural access improvement.
  • Relevance: Empowers specialists in advanced/chronic care delivery.

Read full article (subscription may be required)

Keywords: Venture Medical, wound care specialists, reimbursement support, mobile wound care

2026 Wound Care Compliance: Why Your Current Documentation Won’t Survive the Next RAC Audit



2026 Wound Care Compliance: Why Your Current Documentation Won’t Survive the Next RAC Audit

Summary: February 12, 2026 Pulse post warns of stricter RAC audits using AI to detect inconsistencies in wound care claims. Vulnerabilities: incomplete measurements/depth/exudate/tissue, missing rationale/guideline ties, continuity gaps, insufficient medical necessity proof. Risks: 15-30% revenue denials, extrapolations, repayments. Fixes: CMS-aligned templates, real-time checks/tech, photographic documentation (scale/timestamps), staff training, quarterly mock audits. Advocates performance-based RCM for proactive compliance and profitability.

Key Highlights:

  • Threats: AI-driven scrutiny, vague/templated notes.
  • Solutions: Standardized tools, photos, audits.
  • Relevance: Essential for sustaining advanced therapies amid policy pressures.

Read full article

Keywords: RAC audit, wound care documentation, compliance 2026

Revolutionizing Wound Care with Mobile Solutions



Revolutionizing Wound Care with Mobile Solutions

Summary: February 2026 feature discusses mobile wound care revolutionizing management of chronic/hard-to-heal wounds (DFUs, VLUs, pressure injuries). Highlights mobile clinics, telehealth integration, portable advanced therapies (dressings, debridement tools, NPWT), and point-of-care diagnostics for rural/underserved patients. Benefits: Reduced travel/hospital visits, timely intervention, better adherence, improved healing rates, cost savings, and QoL gains. Addresses barriers (access, transportation) with patient-centered models; examples include van-based services, app-monitored dressings, and multidisciplinary mobile teams. Emphasizes scalability and future potential in post-pandemic care delivery.

Key Highlights:

  • Solutions: Mobile clinics, telehealth, portable tech.
  • Impact: Access equity, faster healing, reduced costs.
  • Relevance: Complements synthetic/innovative therapies in community settings.

Read article

Keywords: mobile wound care, telehealth wound, rural wound access

A New Partnership to Advance Pressure Injury Prevention and Management



A New Partnership to Advance Pressure Injury Prevention and Management

Summary: March 2026 announcement details a new partnership (context: likely SAWC/NPIAP or allied organizations) to advance pressure injury prevention/management. Goals: Enhance education, research, guideline dissemination, tool development, and clinical protocols. Activities: Joint initiatives (webinars, consensus docs, data sharing), improved resources for clinicians (risk assessment, offloading, dressings), focus on high-risk populations (elderly, immobile, diabetic). Ties to rising incidence and economic burden; emphasizes evidence-based, multidisciplinary approaches. Implications: Better outcomes, reduced complications/hospital stays, policy influence.

Key Highlights:

  • Focus: Prevention tools, management standards.
  • Benefits: Collaborative education/research.
  • Relevance: Strengthens pressure injury programs in chronic care.

Read announcement (subscription may be required)

Keywords: pressure injury partnership, prevention management, NPIAP

Towards Limb Preservation



Towards Limb Preservation

Summary: 2025 document from Wound Canada outlines a national vision for limb preservation in diabetes/chronic lower extremity wounds. Key pillars: Early identification (risk screening, AI tools), multidisciplinary care (endocrinology, vascular, podiatry, wound specialists), evidence-based interventions (offloading, revascularization, advanced dressings/grafts, infection control), patient education/adherence. Addresses inequities (rural/Indigenous access, socioeconomic barriers), high amputation burden, and preventable nature. Recommends standardized pathways, telehealth, real-world evidence, policy advocacy for funding/reimbursement. Emphasizes holistic (glycemic control, nutrition, psychological support) and equitable approaches to minimize major amputations and improve QoL.

Read document

Keywords: limb preservation, Wound Canada, DFU prevention, multidisciplinary care

Global Preventive Foot Care



Global Preventive Foot Care

Summary: 2025 document from Wound Canada provides a global view on preventive foot care. Focuses on high-risk groups (diabetes, neuropathy, PAD, elderly); strategies: Annual screening (monofilament, tuning fork, vascular checks), patient education (self-care, footwear), offloading (custom orthotics, shoes), multidisciplinary teams, policy advocacy. Addresses disparities (low-resource settings, cultural barriers), evidence-based tools (IWGDF guidelines), and prevention’s role in reducing DFU/amputation burden. Calls for standardized global approaches, research, and implementation to improve outcomes equitably.

Read document

Keywords: global foot care, DFU prevention, screening strategies

How to Assess Wound Exudate



How to Assess Wound Exudate

Summary: Article provides practical guide to assessing wound exudate in chronic/hard-to-heal wounds. Exudate types: Serous (clear), serosanguineous (pink), sanguineous (bloody), purulent (yellow/green), fibrinous (thick). Volume: Low (moist), moderate (soaked dressing), high (leaking). Assessment: Visual (color, consistency, odor), volume estimation (dressing saturation), peri-wound skin (maceration). Tools: Exudate scales, photography, patient input. Management: Match absorptive dressings (foam, alginate, superabsorbent), topical agents (antimicrobials for infected), frequency changes. Emphasizes exudate as healing indicator (excess delays, optimal moist environment promotes). Relevant for infection/biofilm detection and advanced therapy selection.

Read article

Keywords: wound exudate, exudate assessment, moisture balance

Expanding the Toolbox for Complex Aorta and Limb Salvage



Expanding the Toolbox for Complex Aorta and Limb Salvage

Summary: This February 2026 article explores advanced strategies for managing complex aortoiliac occlusive disease (AIOD) combined with chronic limb-threatening ischemia (CLTI). Emphasizes multidisciplinary collaboration (vascular surgery, interventional radiology, wound care) to expand treatment options beyond traditional open bypass. Covers endovascular (stenting, atherectomy), hybrid procedures, and open surgery tailored to anatomy, comorbidities, and runoff. Highlights improved patency rates, limb salvage success, and reduced major amputation in high-risk patients through innovative tools and techniques. Stresses preoperative planning, perfusion assessment, and postoperative wound management to optimize outcomes in complex cases.

Key Highlights:

  • Multidisciplinary approach key for CLTI + AIOD
  • Endovascular/hybrid options expand toolbox
  • Improved limb salvage and patency
  • Relevance: Critical for ischemic DFUs and lower extremity wounds

Read full article

Keywords: limb salvage, CLTI, aortoiliac disease, multidisciplinary vascular

WCCC Driving Innovation in Wound Care Summit 2026



WCCC Driving Innovation in Wound Care Summit — April 10, 2026 | Charlotte, NC

Summary: The third annual Wound Care Collaborative Community (WCCC) Driving Innovation in Wound Care Summit takes place April 10, 2026, co-located with SAWC Spring | Wound Healing Society in Charlotte, North Carolina. This invitation-only, full-day FDA-recognized working meeting is designed to move the wound care field from discussion to concrete, measurable action. The 2026 program is structured across three progressive phases: vision and policy (featuring perspectives from FDA and CMS, including a keynote from Anitra Graves, MD, CMS Medical Director, Novitas), implementation (WCCC and industry initiatives), and community activation (audience-driven collaboration with structured outputs). This year’s agenda spotlights modernizing evidence standards, strengthening FDA–CMS alignment, elevating patient-reported outcomes, and preparing the field for meaningful integration of AI and digital tools. Sessions include high-impact panels, real-time polling, and an open-mic community forum. Steering Committee Chair: Vickie R. Driver, DPM, MS. Principal Partner: Organogenesis Inc.

Key Highlights:

  • Date: April 10, 2026 | Location: Charlotte, North Carolina (co-located with SAWC Spring | WHS, April 8–12)
  • FDA-recognized, non-accredited, invitation-only working meeting — applications subject to review
  • Keynote from CMS MAC Medical Director on regulatory and payer perspectives
  • Focus areas: evidence modernization, FDA–CMS alignment, patient-reported outcomes, AI/digital tool integration
  • Supporters include Organogenesis, MiMedx, MTF Biologics, MediWound, MIMOSA Diagnostics, and others
  • Relevance: Premier annual policy-action forum for wound care stakeholders invested in regulatory science and access to innovation

Learn more & apply for invitation

Keywords: WCCC Summit, SAWC Spring, wound care innovation, FDA wound care, CMS wound care

New Research in the International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds

Summary: A new article has been published in the International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds (IJLEW), a quarterly peer-reviewed SAGE publication and one of the leading interdisciplinary journals dedicated to the science and practice of lower extremity wound management. IJLEW covers original research, literature reviews, case reports, and clinical commentary for a broad audience including vascular surgeons, podiatrists, plastic surgeons, orthopedic specialists, diabetologists, wound care nurses, and allied health professionals. The journal’s scope encompasses burns, stomas, ulcers, fistulas, and traumatic wounds of the lower extremity, as well as evaluations of assessment and monitoring tools, dressings, gels, pressure management systems, footwear and orthotics, casting, and bioengineered skin constructs. With an average time from submission to first editorial decision of approximately 29 days, IJLEW is a rapid-dissemination venue for clinically important lower extremity wound research. The specific article at this DOI (10.1177/15347346251415253) is available to institutional subscribers and individual access purchasers via SAGE Journals. Full-text access is restricted; the link below will direct readers to the article abstract and access options on the SAGE platform.

Key Highlights:

  • Published in International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds — SAGE’s quarterly peer-reviewed journal covering burns, ulcers, fistulas, stomas, and traumatic lower extremity wounds
  • Interdisciplinary scope: vascular surgery, podiatry, reconstructive plastic surgery, orthotics, diabetology, nursing, and allied health professions
  • Journal also evaluates dressings, gels, cleansers, pressure management systems, footwear, orthotics, casting, and bioengineered skin — making it a key resource for wound product evidence
  • IJLEW is indexed in PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE, and multiple international databases; impact factor 1.5 (5-year: 1.9)
  • Full-text access requires SAGE subscription or per-article purchase; institutional access available through most major academic medical libraries
  • Relevance: Staying current with IJLEW content is essential for lower extremity wound specialists — particularly for DFU, VLU, pressure injury, and post-surgical wound management evidence

Read full article

Keywords: lower extremity woundsdiabetic foot ulcer researchvenous leg ulcerwound care journalpodiatry wound careSAGE wound research

How to Talk to Patients About Their Wounds

How to Talk to Patients About Their Wounds: Tips for Building Trust and Compliance

Summary: Published by Wound Care Professionals on December 2, 2025, this four-minute practice article addresses a frequently underemphasized dimension of wound management: the clinician-patient communication relationship. The piece opens with a striking statistic — research suggests that up to 50% of chronic wound care plans are not followed as prescribed, most commonly because of patient fear, misunderstanding, or insufficient trust in the care team. The author, Nancy Morgan, frames wound care communication not simply as information transfer, but as a two-way dialogue that builds partnership and forms the foundation for long-term compliance. The article outlines five actionable strategies. First, setting a warm and non-judgmental tone early — acknowledging the emotional burden of chronic wounds before diving into clinical details. Second, balancing accessibility with respect: avoiding oversimplification while still translating clinical terminology into plain-language explanations, with visuals of healing stage diagrams recommended where available. Third, involving patients in goal-setting by asking what aspects of the care plan may be difficult to follow in their daily routine — creating shared ownership of the wound care process. Fourth, explaining healing progress honestly and managing expectations around the nonlinear nature of wound repair, including the inflammatory, proliferative, and maturation phases, and using photos or measurements to make progress visible and motivating. Fifth, educating for long-term compliance beyond the immediate wound — including dietary guidance, hygiene, footwear for diabetic patients, and links to community support resources. The article is primarily directed at nurses, therapists, physicians, and home health providers, and is published as part of Wound Care Professionals’ broader educational and certification program portfolio.

Key Highlights:

  • Up to 50% of chronic wound care plans are not followed as prescribed — most commonly due to fear, misunderstanding, or low trust in the care team
  • Five strategies: (1) non-judgmental tone-setting; (2) plain-language explanation without condescension; (3) patient involvement in goal-setting; (4) transparent healing expectation management; (5) long-term compliance education
  • Clinicians advised to validate the emotional impact of wounds before presenting clinical information — particularly important for patients experiencing shame, anxiety, or grief about their wound
  • Wound photographs with patient consent recommended as motivational progress-tracking tools — transforming subjective improvement into visible, measurable progress
  • Long-term compliance framing: wound care as a lifestyle shift requiring ongoing patient education on prevention, nutrition, hygiene, and footwear
  • Applies across all care settings: hospital inpatient, outpatient wound clinic, home health, and long-term care — relevant to any clinician managing chronic or recurring wounds

Read full article

Keywords: wound care patient communicationwound care compliancepatient education wound carechronic wound adherencewound care trust buildingwound care nurse communication

Nancy Morgan

Confronting Rising Diabetes Amputations

Summary: Published March 11, 2026 in the Guyana Times, this editorial responds to remarks by Guyana’s Health Minister Frank Anthony on World Diabetes Day documenting an increase in diabetes-related amputations in the country. More than one in seven Guyanese adults lives with diabetes, and data from the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation show that a substantial proportion of diabetic foot infections ultimately result in amputation — reflecting, the editorial argues, failures not just at the clinical management stage but across the entire continuum of care: from prevention and primary care access through early detection, wound management, and multidisciplinary intervention. The piece frames the rising amputation rate as a systemic warning indicator rather than isolated clinical events. It contends that most diabetic amputations are preventable when complications are identified early, and calls for strengthened primary healthcare services capable of detecting warning signs before wounds become limb-threatening; comprehensive public health education campaigns on diabetic foot self-care, routine monitoring, and early symptom reporting; and investment in dedicated foot care clinics, wound management programmes, and vascular assessment tools. The editorial endorses the Health Ministry’s commitment to building multidisciplinary collaboration across surgical, internal medicine, and rehabilitation departments, noting that preserving limbs requires coordinated specialist care. The piece also connects the diabetic foot epidemic to a parallel kidney disease burden, welcoming the expansion of dialysis capacity across regional hospitals and the activation of additional dialysis chairs — and highlighting the continued importance of NGO and civil society partnerships in bridging specialist care gaps in remote communities. The editorial concludes with a call for the rising amputation count to be treated as an urgent prompt for a coordinated national response prioritising prevention, early intervention, and expanded specialised care across all of Guyana’s geographic regions.

Key Highlights:

  • Guyana Health Minister Frank Anthony cited rising diabetes-related amputations on World Diabetes Day — Georgetown Public Hospital data show a substantial proportion of diabetic foot infections result in amputation
  • More than 1 in 7 Guyanese adults lives with diabetes; diabetic foot infections are increasingly common and often escalate to amputation when detected late or inadequately managed
  • Editorial frames amputations as largely preventable through: regular foot examinations, proper wound care, glycaemic control, and timely vascular/wound specialist intervention
  • Recommended system-level responses: stronger primary care for early DFI detection; public education campaigns on diabetic self-care and foot symptom recognition; foot care clinics; wound management programmes; expanded vascular assessment
  • Multidisciplinary care model advocated: surgery, internal medicine, nursing, and rehabilitation coordination required to maximise limb salvage and support recovery after amputation
  • Parallel kidney burden: dialysis infrastructure expansion across regional hospitals and continued NGO partnerships cited as essential alongside foot care improvements to address the full spectrum of diabetes complications

Read full article

Keywords: diabetes amputation preventiondiabetic foot infection globaldiabetic foot care public healthwound care access developing countrieslimb salvage diabetes policydiabetes complications wound care

Guyana Times Editorial Board

Hidden Crisis in Wound Care: Pressure Injuries

Hidden Crisis in Wound Care: Pressure Injuries

Summary: Hosted on the Demio webinar platform, this continuing education event titled “Hidden Crisis in Wound Care: Pressure Injuries” addresses one of wound care’s most prevalent and preventable — yet persistently underrecognised — clinical challenges. Pressure injuries (also called pressure ulcers or decubitus ulcers) affect an estimated 2.5 million patients per year in the United States alone, contributing significantly to prolonged hospitalisation, sepsis, surgical interventions, litigation, and mortality, particularly in the elderly, critically ill, and mobility-impaired populations. Despite broad awareness within nursing and wound care circles, pressure injuries continue to represent a hidden crisis in healthcare because they frequently develop in clinically silenced settings — under intact skin as deep tissue injuries, in patients unable to communicate pain, and in long-term care settings with limited wound care specialist access. The webinar format allows clinicians — nurses, wound care specialists, long-term care providers, and hospital administrators — to engage with expert-led education on the current NPIAP/EPUAP/PPPIA international pressure injury staging and classification system (Stages 1–4, unstageable, and deep tissue pressure injury), prevention frameworks including the use of pressure redistribution support surfaces, repositioning protocols, skin assessment tools (Braden Scale, Norton Scale), and nutrition-based preventive strategies. Management topics typically include moist wound healing principles, debridement decision pathways, dressing selection, offloading, negative pressure wound therapy in pressure injury management, and multidisciplinary care coordination across acute, post-acute, and community settings. For registration and webinar date/time details, visit the link below.

Key Highlights:

  • Free continuing education webinar on pressure injury prevention and management — covering NPIAP/EPUAP/PPPIA classification, staging, and international guideline recommendations
  • Addresses the “hidden crisis” framing: pressure injuries frequently develop silently under intact skin (deep tissue injuries), in non-communicating patients, and in under-resourced long-term care settings
  • Prevention framework: pressure redistribution surfaces, repositioning schedules, skin assessment (Braden/Norton), moisture management, nutrition optimisation — comprehensive risk mitigation strategies
  • Management topics: moist wound healing, debridement, dressing selection for each pressure injury stage, NPWT indications, surgical wound closure considerations, and care coordination across transitions
  • Audience: wound care nurses, clinical nurse specialists, long-term care staff, hospital administrators, and any clinician involved in pressure injury prevention or treatment programs
  • Registration and scheduling: available via Demio at the link below — check for live and on-demand session availability

Register for webinar

Keywords: pressure injury preventionpressure ulcer staging NPIAPdeep tissue pressure injurypressure injury wound care educationBraden Scale pressure ulcerpressure injury management nursing

Wound Care Professionals

Therapeutic Strategies for Managing Diabetic Foot Ulcers and Mitigating Associated Complications

Editorial: Innovative Therapeutic Strategies for Managing Diabetic Foot Ulcers and Mitigating Associated Complications

Summary: Published March 19, 2026 in Frontiers in Pharmacology (Vol. 17, IF 4.8), this editorial by Calvin A. Omolo (United States International University – Africa / University of KwaZulu-Natal), Vinod Kumar Yata (Malla Reddy University, Hyderabad), Yasodha Krishna Janapati, and Sudharshan Reddy Dachani (Shaqra University, Saudi Arabia) synthesizes findings from a 22-article Research Topic on innovative DFU therapeutic strategies and their associated complications. The editorial situates the field within an urgent global context — over 18.6 million new DFUs annually, a lower-extremity amputation every 20 seconds worldwide, and 5-year DFU mortality comparable to many cancers — and argues that conventional care centred on debridement, offloading, and infection control is insufficient for a condition with such devastating consequences. The editorial organises the 22 articles into five thematic pillars. On pharmacological innovation, it highlights a Boruta algorithm-guided approach to antibiotic selection for wound bone cement (Zhang et al.) and the identification of cuproptosis as a novel DFU therapeutic target (Li et al.). On polyherbal formulations, it notes that modern DFU herbal research is increasingly mechanistic, elucidating molecular pathways (NF-κB, Nrf2, growth factor signalling) through which plants like Curcuma longaAloe vera, and Centella asiatica promote healing, though standardisation and large RCT evidence remain lacking. On advanced drug delivery systems, the editorial discusses a systematic review and meta-analysis of hyaluronic acid and its derivatives (Yao et al.) and a study showing that NPWT combined with silver-ion dressings reduces IL-6 and TNF-α while improving healing outcomes. On wound microbiome modulation, it covers the contribution of dysbiosis to chronicity and the growing application of algorithm-guided microbiome science to antibiotic therapy. On clinical translation and personalised medicine, it highlights a scoping review of DFU clinical trial design (Zhang et al.) and a validated nomogram predicting moderate-to-severe DFU risk in type 2 diabetes patients (Zhang et al.). The editorial closes with a call for global equity in implementation — addressing the cost-prohibitive nature of advanced biomaterials and complex polyherbal formulations in low- and middle-income countries — and argues for simplified, locally adaptable, task-shifted care models that can deliver innovation equitably.

Key Highlights:

  • Global DFU burden framing: 18.6 million new ulcers annually, one amputation every 20 seconds worldwide, 5-year mortality rivalling multiple common cancers — yet DFU recurrence and its consequences remain normalised in clinical culture, which the editorial explicitly critiques
  • Precision pharmacology: algorithm-guided microbiome analysis for antibiotic selection in wound bone cement (moving away from empirical treatment) and cuproptosis as a novel mechanistic DFU target — both requiring substantial further validation before clinical readiness
  • Polyherbal and natural formulations: key wound-healing herbs (*Curcuma longa*, *Aloe vera*, *Centella asiatica*) showing mechanistic molecular evidence (NF-κB, Nrf2, growth factor signalling), but lacking standardised extracts and large-scale RCTs with hard endpoints such as amputation prevention
  • Advanced biomaterials: hyaluronic acid derivatives (systematic review confirming moist wound environment maintenance and controlled drug/growth factor release); NPWT + silver-ion dressings (reduced IL-6, TNF-α, and improved healing) — both showing promise but facing cost and regulatory complexity barriers
  • Clinical translation tools: a scoping review of DFU clinical trial design flaws; a nomogram for individual moderate-to-severe DFU risk prediction in type 2 diabetes patients — both addressing the gap between laboratory innovation and bedside implementation
  • Global equity imperative: the editorial explicitly calls for parallel development of simplified, affordable, locally sourced adaptations of advanced therapies, including low-cost point-of-care diagnostics, standardised herbal products, and task-shifted care models, to prevent innovation from widening existing health disparities

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Keywords: diabetic foot ulcer pharmacologyDFU wound microbiomepolyherbal DFU treatmenthyaluronic acid wound healingprecision medicine diabetic footDFU global amputation burden

Calvin A. Omolo, Vinod Kumar Yata, Yasodha Krishna Janapati, Sudharshan Reddy Dachani

Debrisoft Family Module [CPD E-Learning Module]

Summary: The Wound Care Today Learning Zone hosts a dedicated CPD e-learning module on the Debrisoft family of monofilament fibre debridement devices, produced in partnership with Lohmann & Rauscher (L&R), the manufacturer of the Debrisoft product range. The module covers the main features and benefits of Debrisoft Pads and the Debrisoft Lolly (a monofilament fibre pad with an ergonomic handle for hard-to-reach wounds), and provides guidance on correct use. Debrisoft’s monofilament fibre technology works by physically disrupting and lifting devitalised tissue, slough, biofilm, fibrinous deposits, and debris from wound beds and periwound skin through circular or sweeping motion, with the device hydrated with saline or wound cleanser prior to application. The technology received a positive recommendation from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE Medical Technology Guidance MTG17) for use in acute and chronic wounds in community and clinic settings, based on clinical evidence of rapid and effective mechanical debridement with minimal patient discomfort and demonstrated cost savings versus saline/gauze, hydrogel, and larval therapy. Key supporting evidence includes: a 2021 prescribing audit by Burnett et al. (J Wound Care 30(5):381–388, DOI: 10.12968/jowc.2021.30.5.381) in 486 NHS patients showing reduced wound-care prescribing costs following Debrisoft introduction; a 2018 multicenter user test by Dissemond et al. (J Wound Care 27(7):421–425) across 155 wounds evaluating the Debrisoft Lolly for hard-to-reach wound debridement; and a 2018 ex vivo and clinical study by Schultz et al. (J Wound Care 27(2):80–90) demonstrating effectiveness at removing biofilm and slough. The Debrisoft Duo product extends the original Pad with a dual-sided design: the original soft white monofilament side for debris, exudate, and biofilm removal, and a textured beige side for loosening firmly adherent fibrinous slough. The module is freely accessible to registered Wound Care Today users and offers CPD certification upon completion.

Key Highlights:

  • Monofilament technology: Debrisoft’s densely packed monofilament fibres reach into the wound bed and periwound skin to physically disrupt and remove necrotic tissue, biofilm, fibrinous slough, dry skin, and keratosis — while sparing newly formed granulation tissue and epithelial cells
  • NICE MTG17 endorsement: the only mechanical debridement technology to receive NICE Medical Technology Guidance for community use; cost-saving analysis showed £77–£222 savings vs. hydrogel, £97–£347 vs. saline/gauze, and £180–£484 vs. larval therapy per patient
  • Debrisoft Lolly: ergonomic handle design for debridement of cavities, sinuses, tunnelling wounds, body folds, and other anatomically challenging wound locations — evaluated in 155 wounds across 20 international centres by Dissemond et al.
  • Biofilm relevance: Schultz et al. (2018) demonstrated ex vivo removal of mature biofilm from porcine dermal tissue, supporting Debrisoft’s role within biofilm-based wound care (BBWC) and wound bed preparation (TIME/TIMERS framework)
  • Prescribing impact: Burnett et al. (2021) NHS audit of 486 patients found that introduction of Debrisoft monofilament debridement pad was associated with measurable reductions in wound-care prescribing costs over 6 months — providing real-world economic evidence beyond the NICE modelling
  • Module access: freely available after registration at woundcare-today.com/learning-zone; CPD certification awarded on completion — suitable for district nurses, tissue viability nurses, and wound care clinicians seeking structured learning on mechanical debridement tools

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Keywords: Debrisoft wound debridementmonofilament debridement padwound bed preparation debridementNICE wound debridement guidancebiofilm mechanical debridementCPD wound care education

Wound Care Today / Lohmann & Rauscher

Monofilament Fibre Debridement Pad for Patients with Unhealed Wounds After Six Months

An Audit to Assess the Impact of Prescribing a Monofilament Fibre Debridement Pad for Patients with Unhealed Wounds After Six Months

Summary: Published May 2, 2021 in the Journal of Wound Care (Vol. 30, No. 5, pp. 381–388; DOI: 10.12968/jowc.2021.30.5.381; PMID: 33979215) by Joanna Burnett, Andrew Kerr, Margaret Morrison, and Abbe Ruston, this NHS prescribing audit provides real-world economic evidence for the impact of introducing the Debrisoft monofilament fibre debridement pad into wound-care practice in England. Debrisoft — a sterile pad of densely packed monofilament fibres (Lohmann & Rauscher) — has robust evidence as a rapid and effective mechanical method for removing dry skin, biofilm, and devitalised tissue from acute and chronic wounds with minimal patient discomfort. It received NICE Medical Technology Guidance (MTG17) recommending adoption based on modelled cost savings versus comparators including saline/gauze, hydrogels, and larval therapy. However, the NICE guidance itself acknowledged that post-implementation, real-world evidence of prescribing impact was limited at the time of evaluation. This audit addresses that gap. Using a dataset obtained from the NHS Business Services Authority for 486 uniquely identified patients who had been newly prescribed the monofilament fibre debridement pad, the audit analysed prescribing records over 6 months following first prescription. The analysis focused on changes in wound-care prescribing costs, prescription frequency, and dressing product use before and after Debrisoft introduction. Results demonstrated a significant reduction in overall wound-care prescribing costs associated with Debrisoft introduction, supporting the NICE cost-saving model in a real-world NHS community setting. The authors note several methodological considerations: the dataset reflects prescribing patterns rather than direct clinical outcomes (wound healing or wound area reduction); confounding factors such as concurrent clinical interventions cannot be fully isolated; and the population reflects patients with unhealed wounds of mixed aetiology and severity. Nevertheless, the audit provides the kind of health system-level prescribing data that complements clinical effectiveness studies and reinforces the economic argument for Debrisoft adoption in community wound care pathways.

Key Highlights:

  • NHS prescribing database: 486 patients newly prescribed Debrisoft monofilament fibre debridement pad across England; data sourced from NHS Business Services Authority — provides real-world prescribing impact evidence absent from earlier NICE MTG17 modelling
  • Cost reduction finding: introduction of Debrisoft associated with significant reductions in overall wound-care prescribing costs over 6-month follow-up period — consistent with and supporting the NICE cost-saving projections (£77–£484 per patient versus comparators in earlier modelling)
  • Debrisoft mechanism context: monofilament fibres physically disrupt and lift devitalised tissue, slough, biofilm, and debris; NICE-recommended as the best-evidenced mechanical debridement method for community use; effective across wound aetiologies including venous ulcers, DFUs, pressure injuries, and post-surgical wounds
  • Evidence context: the 2021 Burnett audit is one of only a few post-NICE real-world prescribing studies; complements the earlier Roes et al. 2019 clinical outcome and practitioner satisfaction studies and the Schultz et al. 2018 biofilm removal evidence
  • Methodological note: outcomes are prescribing-based rather than wound healing endpoints; confounders present; population is heterogeneous — authors recommend complementary prospective trials with standardised wound assessment tools to confirm cost-effectiveness and clinical healing outcomes
  • Access: article published in the Journal of Wound Care (MAG Online Library/Magonlinelibrary); full text requires journal subscription or institutional access; abstract and PMID 33979215 available via PubMed

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Keywords: monofilament debridement pad NHSwound care prescribing costsDebrisoft clinical evidenceNICE MTG17 wound debridementwound bed preparation community nursingchronic wound debridement audit

Joanna Burnett, Andrew Kerr, Margaret Morrison, Abbe Ruston

Emerging Therapies, Innovations Highlight the Evolving Dermatology Treatment Landscape



Emerging Therapies, Innovations Highlight the Evolving Dermatology Treatment Landscape

Summary: This article reviews the rapidly evolving dermatology treatment landscape, highlighting new therapies and innovations with direct relevance to wound healing and chronic skin conditions. Covers advances in biologics, regenerative medicine, topical agents, and device-based technologies that improve outcomes for hard-to-heal wounds, ulcers, and inflammatory skin disorders. Emphasizes how these emerging tools are shifting care from reactive to proactive, with better healing rates, reduced scarring, and improved patient quality of life. Includes discussion on integration into clinical practice and future directions for dermatology-wound care collaboration.

Key Highlights:

  • Focus on biologics and regenerative approaches for chronic wounds
  • Innovations improving healing rates and reducing complications
  • Shifting toward proactive, personalized dermatology care
  • Relevance: Bridges dermatology and advanced wound management

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Keywords: dermatology innovations, regenerative medicine, chronic wound therapies

Could a Simple Blood Test Signal Diabetic Foot Ulcer Risk?



Could a Simple Blood Test Signal Diabetic Foot Ulcer Risk?

Summary: February 2026 article discusses promising research into blood-based biomarkers that could help identify patients at high risk of developing diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) before clinical signs appear. Explores how specific inflammatory, metabolic, or vascular markers in routine blood tests might predict ulcer formation or poor healing. Highlights the potential for simple, non-invasive screening to complement current tools (monofilament, ABI, temperature monitoring). Early detection could enable timely preventive interventions (offloading, education, vascular care) and reduce amputation rates. Calls for further validation and integration into routine diabetes care protocols.

Key Highlights:

  • Blood biomarkers as potential early DFU risk indicators
  • Complement to traditional clinical assessments
  • Opportunity for proactive prevention and reduced amputations
  • Relevance: Advances risk stratification in diabetic foot care

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Keywords: DFU risk biomarkers, blood test DFU, diabetic foot ulcer, prevention screening

AI–Enhanced Wound Care to Improve Access, Efficacy, and Equity in Wound Care for Older Adults



Artificial Intelligence–Enhanced Wound Care to Improve Access, Efficacy, and Equity in Wound Care for Older Adults in Rural and Remote Regions of Canada

Summary: This 2026 viewpoint paper by Courtney Genge and colleagues advocates for wider adoption of AI-enhanced digital wound care technology (DWCT) to address inequities in wound management for older adults in rural and remote Canadian regions. Drawing on literature and real-world implementations in Ontario community health systems (including an Indigenous-led service), the authors highlight how AI tools improve wound measurement accuracy, tissue classification, healing trajectory prediction, and multidisciplinary communication. Benefits observed include reduced specialist travel (over 1000 km saved in one year), faster healing in high-risk cases, fewer emergency visits, and better patient engagement. The technology helps overcome workforce shortages, geographic barriers, and assessment variability, promoting timely interventions and supporting aging-in-place. Calls for broader implementation and policy support to scale equitable wound care.

Key Highlights:

  • AI improves accuracy of wound assessment and reduces subjectivity
  • Significant time and travel savings in rural/remote settings
  • Enhanced equity and outcomes for older adults with chronic wounds
  • Authors: Courtney Genge, Basnama Ayaz, Shannon Freeman, Heba Tallah Mohammed et al.

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Keywords: AI wound care, digital wound technology, rural wound care, Courtney Genge

Karnataka Leads National Push on Diabetic Foot Prevention with Launch of PRAIAS Initiative



Karnataka Leads National Push on Diabetic Foot Prevention with Launch of PRAIAS Initiative

Summary: Karnataka has launched the PRAIAS (Podiatry Reach Across India for Awareness and Screening) initiative at Gulbarga Institute of Medical Sciences in Kalaburagi to combat the rising burden of diabetic foot complications. Conceptualized by diabetic foot surgeons Dr. Sanjay Sharma and Dr. Pavan Belehalli and driven by FootSecure and StrideAide, the program features India’s first Digital Podiatry Screening Van equipped with advanced diagnostic tools. The mobile unit will travel across the country, focusing on underserved and remote areas to provide screening, awareness, and early intervention. Globally, a limb is lost every 20 seconds due to diabetes; in India, a new diabetic foot ulcer develops every 12 seconds. The initiative aims to reduce amputations through timely detection, education, and lifestyle management, with strong support from Karnataka’s Minister for Medical Education.

Key Highlights:

  • First-of-its-kind Digital Podiatry Screening Van for nationwide outreach
  • Focus on early detection and prevention in rural/underserved communities
  • Led by Dr. Sanjay Sharma and Dr. Pavan Belehalli; supported by FootSecure and StrideAide
  • Addresses alarming statistics: limb lost every 20 seconds globally due to diabetes

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Keywords: PRAIAS initiative, diabetic foot prevention, screening van, Sanjay Sharma

From Glucose to Limb Salvage: New Therapeutic Frontiers to Redefine Outcomes in Diabetic Foot Disease



From Glucose to Limb Salvage: New Therapeutic Frontiers to Redefine Outcomes in Diabetic Foot Disease

Summary: This forward-looking review in *Diabetes Care* emphasizes that while glycemic control remains foundational, new therapeutic frontiers are needed to address the persistent high amputation rates in diabetic foot disease. Highlighted areas include advanced wound biologics, stem cell and platelet-derived therapies, neuromodulation for perfusion and pain, smart offloading technologies, and personalized medicine approaches. The authors call for integrated multidisciplinary care models that combine metabolic optimization with these innovative tools to shift outcomes from amputation to durable limb salvage.

Key Highlights:

  • Beyond glucose control: focus on perfusion, infection, and regenerative therapies
  • Emerging role of biologics, neuromodulation, and sensor-based offloading
  • Urgent need for better prevention and limb-preservation pathways

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Keywords: limb salvage DFU, new therapies diabetic foot

Digital Health Service for Diabetic Foot Ulcer Risk Stratification



Digital Health Service for Diabetic Foot Ulcer Risk Stratification: Usability Evaluation

Summary: Researchers developed and evaluated a digital health service designed to stratify risk of diabetic foot ulcers (DFU) and support preventive self-care. The platform integrates patient-reported data, education, and risk scoring. Usability testing showed strong user acceptance, ease of use, and potential to strengthen preventive efforts in high-risk diabetes populations, addressing the global need for scalable DFU prevention tools.

Key Highlights:

  • Digital tool combining risk assessment with patient education and monitoring
  • High usability scores from both patients and healthcare providers
  • Supports early identification and timely preventive interventions
  • Addresses lifetime DFU risk (up to 34%) through accessible technology

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Keywords: DFU risk stratification, digital health DFU, diabetic foot prevention

From a Pragmatic Clinical Staging of Distal Symmetrical Polyneuropathy to a Continuum of Diabetes Severity



From a Pragmatic Clinical Staging of Distal Symmetrical Polyneuropathy to a Continuum of Diabetes Severity: New Ideas, New Challenges

Summary: In this editorial, Anastasios Tentolouris and Péter Kempler discuss two emerging frameworks: a pragmatic five-stage clinical staging system for distal symmetrical polyneuropathy (DSPN) and the broader Diabetes Severity Classification (DSC). These tools move beyond binary diabetes classification toward a continuum model that better reflects complication risk, enabling earlier identification of high-risk patients for intensified foot care and prevention strategies.

Key Highlights:

  • New pragmatic DSPN staging system from early vulnerability to advanced ulceration risk
  • Diabetes Severity Classification (DSC) as a multi-axial continuum model
  • Strong potential to improve risk stratification and foot ulcer prevention
  • Calls for validation and integration into routine clinical practice

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Keywords: DSPN staging, diabetes severity classification, diabetic neuropathy staging

Prevention and Care of Pressure Ulcers in Long-Term Bedridden Adults: An Evidence-Based Review


Prevention and Care of Pressure Ulcers in Long-Term Bedridden Adults: An Evidence-Based Review

Summary: This review synthesizes current evidence on the prevention and management of pressure ulcers in long-term bedridden adults. It emphasises validated risk assessment tools (e.g., Braden Scale), regular repositioning schedules, appropriate support surfaces, nutritional optimisation, and skin care protocols. The authors stress the importance of multidisciplinary approaches to reduce incidence and improve healing outcomes in this vulnerable population.

Key Highlights:

  • Comprehensive risk assessment and early identification strategies
  • Evidence-based repositioning and pressure-redistribution recommendations
  • Role of nutrition, skin care, and multidisciplinary teams
  • Practical guidance for long-term care settings

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Keywords: pressure ulcer prevention, bedridden pressure ulcers, Braden Scale