This document addresses the challenge of long-term, hard-to-heal wounds - those that do not close after care for up to a year or more.
Key points:Hard-to-heal wounds affect the patient’s quality of life, as well as being a burden on the health-care system.
Incidence of hard-to-heal wounds is rising as the age of the population increases.
Patient-related factors that influence outcomes include comorbidities, severity of the underlying condition and adherence.
Correct treatment at an early stage could prevent many hard-to-heal wounds.
Provider-related factors include awareness of treatment options available, the influence of external wound-healing inhibitors such as biofilm and availability of products.
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The full document is available at Journal of Wound Care
Leanne Atkin et al. Vascular Nurse Consultant. Mid Yorkshire NHS Trust/University of Huddersfield, England
Citation reference
Atkin L, Bućko Z, Conde Montero E, Cutting K, Moffatt C, Probst A, Romanelli M, Schultz GS, Tettelbach W. Implementing TIMERS: the race against hard-to-heal wounds. J Wound Care 2019; 28(3 Suppl 3):S1–S49
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