
Wound healing isn't everything
Author(s) -
Maida Vincent,
Corban Jason
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
international wound journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.867
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1742-481X
pISSN - 1742-4801
DOI - 10.1111/j.1742-481x.2012.01046.x
Subject(s) - medicine , life expectancy , palliative care , wound care , context (archaeology) , quality of life (healthcare) , population , intensive care medicine , health care , nursing , paleontology , environmental health , economics , biology , economic growth
Patients with advanced illness, defined as those patients with incurable diseases (cancer and/or non-cancer), where the life expectancy is generally less than 6 months, represent the cohort within health care with the highest overall prevalence of all wound classes (1). Pressure ulcers represent the class of wounds with the highest prevalence among such patients at the point when they are referred for supportive and palliative care (1). Goal setting is challenging in this context given their high level of complexity, often rapidly evolving illness trajectory, and limited life expectancy (2–4). Furthermore, goals of care change as patients traverse life’s continuum (2–4). Although complete wound healing is the most coveted target, clinicians should not discount nor marginalise the value of achieving other significant outcomes. The concept of wound maintenance (stabilisation) has been defined in both patients with advanced illness as well as non-terminally ill patients (2–4). In addition to optimal wound palliation (wound-related pain and symptom management or palliative wound care), it is also imperative to provide health care that is patient-centered/patient empowered, while promoting the best achievable levels of health-related quality of life and well-being (2–5). Moreover, it is also vitally important to exercise maximal primary and secondary preventive endeavours given the propensity of this patient population to develop new wounds from all classes (2–4). Our recent publication, in this journal, showed that a small, although not negligible, proportion of patients with advanced illness experience complete healing of pressure ulcers, especially within stage I and stage II (2). Subsequent analyses, on the same data set, were carried out to assess the proportions of pressure ulcers that showed improvement (healing), deterioration, as well as those that did not show any significant change at all (maintenance). Data is presented in Table 1, and is stratified by NPUAP pressure ulcer stage. Within this analysis, ‘wound healing’ was defined as a summation of wound improvement (reduction in wound dimensions) and complete wound healing (complete epithelialisation). The tendency to demonstrate wound healing trended inversely with degree of tissue injury. The highest levels