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TIME CDST: an updated tool to address the current challenges in wound care
Author(s) -
Zena Moore,
Caroline Dowsett,
Glenn Smith,
Leanne Atkin,
Michael A. Bain,
Nils Lahmann,
Gregory S. Schultz,
Terry Swanson,
Peter Vowden,
Dot Weir,
Ann Zmuda,
H Jaimes
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of wound care
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.52
H-Index - 65
eISSN - 2052-2916
pISSN - 0969-0700
DOI - 10.12968/jowc.2019.28.3.154
Subject(s) - wound care , medicine , consistency (knowledge bases) , health care , wound dressing , simple (philosophy) , patient care , risk analysis (engineering) , management science , nursing , computer science , artificial intelligence , intensive care medicine , epistemology , engineering , philosophy , economics , economic growth , materials science , composite material
Despite the understanding that wounds are a common problem affecting the individual, the health service and society as a whole, there continues to be a lack of a systematic, structured, evidence-based approach to wound management. The TIME principle was first published in 2003, 1 and has since been integrated by many into clinical practice and research. However, this tool has been criticised for its tendency to focus mainly on the wound rather than on the wider issues that the patient is presenting with. At an expert meeting held in London in 2018, this conundrum was addressed and the TIME clinical decision support tool (CDST) was elaborated upon. This article introduces the TIME CDST, explains why it is required and describes how its use is likely to benefit patients, clinicians and health-service organisations. It also explores the framework in detail, and shows why this simple and accessible framework is robust enough to facilitate consistency in the delivery of wound care and better patient outcomes. Finally, it outlines the next steps for the rollout, use and evaluation of the impact of the TIME CDST.

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