Regional Network

Conditions

Wound types we commonly support.

Dedicated pages for the wound types families, social workers, home health agencies, facility teams, and physicians refer most often.

Home visits Facility coordination Post-discharge follow-up

Conditions

Each wound type needs a real plan, not a generic dressing change.

Pressure ulcers

Pressure injuries need pressure relief, turning schedules, support surfaces, moisture control, nutrition awareness, dressing cadence, and documentation that facility teams and families can follow.

Learn more

Diabetic foot ulcers

Diabetic foot ulcers need offloading, vascular awareness, infection vigilance, glucose context, footwear communication, and fast escalation when the wound is not moving.

Learn more

Venous leg ulcers

Venous leg ulcers need compression-aware planning, drainage management, periwound protection, edema control, and consistent follow-up.

Learn more

Wound VAC / NPWT care

NPWT care depends on seal integrity, dressing cadence, drainage monitoring, supply coordination, and communication with the ordering team.

Learn more

Post-surgical wounds

Post-surgical wounds need surgeon-aware follow-up, drainage monitoring, infection watch, dehiscence awareness, and clear feedback to the operating team.

Learn more

Arterial ulcers

Arterial and ischemic wounds need vascular caution, tissue assessment, realistic goals, and disciplined escalation.

Learn more

Skin tears

Skin tears can destabilize quickly in older adults. Good care protects fragile skin, reduces infection risk, and helps prevent repeat injury.

Learn more

Non-healing wounds

Non-healing wounds need a fresh look at pressure, perfusion, infection, edema, nutrition, dressing selection, and follow-up discipline.

Learn more

Dehisced wounds

Dehisced wounds need careful measurement, drainage management, protection of the wound edge, and communication with the surgeon or treating physician.

Learn more

Surgical site infections

Suspected surgical site infection needs timely recognition, documentation, escalation, and coordination with the responsible physician.

Learn more

Lymphedema wounds

Lymphedema-related wounds need compression-aware care, drainage control, skin protection, and practical home or facility routines.

Learn more

Traumatic wounds

Traumatic wounds need cleansing, dressing selection, infection watch, tetanus context, and escalation when deeper structures may be involved.

Learn more
CallRefer