NYC wound-care service
In-home debridement coordination.
Clinician-directed wound-bed assessment and debridement support when medically appropriate, with escalation when surgical care is needed.
Who this helps
A practical wound-care lane for referral sources and families who need the patient seen, the plan clarified, and the right people kept in the loop.
Hospitals
Discharge planners and case managers trying to prevent wound-care gaps.
Facilities
SNFs, rehab centers, ALFs, and senior living teams that need wound follow-up.
Physicians
Primary care, podiatry, vascular, surgery, and specialists referring complex wounds.
Families
Patients and caregivers trying to avoid unnecessary clinic travel.
Related wound types
The same service line often touches multiple wound types.
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 moreDiabetic 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 moreVenous leg ulcers
Venous leg ulcers need compression-aware planning, drainage management, periwound protection, edema control, and consistent follow-up.
Learn moreWound VAC / NPWT care
NPWT care depends on seal integrity, dressing cadence, drainage monitoring, supply coordination, and communication with the ordering team.
Learn morePost-surgical wounds
Post-surgical wounds need surgeon-aware follow-up, drainage monitoring, infection watch, dehiscence awareness, and clear feedback to the operating team.
Learn moreArterial ulcers
Arterial and ischemic wounds need vascular caution, tissue assessment, realistic goals, and disciplined escalation.
Learn more