A wound care center is a specialist medical treatment center that deals with wounds that won’t heal. Wound care center staff may include specially certified doctors, nurses, and physical therapists that can help manage and heal problematic wounds. These healthcare providers will coordinate treatment with your personal physician to make sure that you get the best care possible.
Typical wounds do not usually require treatment in a specialist wound care center. You might want to consider treatment in a wound care facility if you have a wound that hasn’t started to heal after 2 weeks, or still hasn’t completely healed after 6 weeks.
Wounds that would benefit from specialist wound care treatment include diabetic ulcers or other diabetes-related wounds; pressure ulcers; arterial or venous ulcers; moderate to severe burns; moderately to severely infected wounds; wounds resulting from surgery and amputation; and other complex wounds resulting from compromised circulation, such as traumatic injuries, wounds in patients with congestive heart failure or vascular disease, wounds in patients with severe obesity, and wounds in those suffering from renal failure or lymphedema.
Here are a few of the things you should consider when choosing a healthcare center for your wound treatment:
Wound VAC
Vacuum-assisted wound closure, or wound VAC, is one of the latest treatments for wound care.
During this treatment, healthcare professionals use a wound vacuum device to remove air pressure from the surface of the wound.
This process helps to reduce swelling, cleans the wound, removes bacteria to prevent infection, and pulls the edges of the wound together gently, helping the wound to close and heal. Wound VAC has a number of advantages over other treatments: it tends to reduce wound discomfort and pain, usually reduces the number of dressing changes you need, and may also make it easier to keep dressings in place. The dressings usually need changing less often. And they may be easier to keep in place.
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT)
During hyperbaric oxygen therapy, the patient lies in a hyperbaric chamber, while the air pressure is increased to two or three times higher than normal. This means that you can take in much more oxygen than usual, which is then carried throughout your body in your bloodstream. This increased oxygen level encourages wound healing and fights bacteria.
If you have a wound that isn’t healing, you’d be well advised to consider working with a wound care center. Rehab Select has wound care specialists at 3 out of 5 of our locations to help your rehabilitation process. Click here to learn more about the wound care treatment available in our inpatient rehab facilities at Rehab Select.