Wound Management Program |
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Treating slow-to-heal and non-healing wounds is a complex process. Patients face serious risk of infection and often suffer from multiple medical complications. Specific therapies and treatments are necessary to help these patients recover and build their strength. The types of wounds treated at RML include:
Our wound management program is led by certified wound, ostomy, and continence nurses supported by the medical supervision of board-certified infectious disease physicians. The wound management team is rounded out by dietitians, pharmacists, occupational and physical therapists, physician assistant and often a physiatrist—all critical components to the treating and healing of our wound patients. These experts conduct thorough, independent examinations of a patient's overall health and the extent of the wound. The team then comes together to compare findings and set a course of treatment that takes nutrition, blood protein levels, and a patient's ability to fight infection into consideration. We chronicle progress by comparing a series of photographs and blood test results, taken each week, and monitoring the effects of diet and changes in strength and stamina. Keeping a watchful eye on the healing signs enables us to adjust treatment and therapies or implement more aggressive interventions to reach a positive outcome. RML's leadership in wound management was recognized by the National Association of Long Term Hospitals (NALTH). Key to obtaining the award was the development and implementation of a support surface methodology, which uses a variety of specialty beds and mattresses to reduce surface pressures, assist in patient positioning, and meet individual patient wound healing needs. |
