Wound Dock™

Why don’t hospitals use advanced wound grafts?

Hospitals typically do not use advanced wound grafts because they operate under bundled payment systems, have short patient stays, and lack the long-term documentation required for insurance coverage. These therapies are usually provided in outpatient wound clinics instead.

Advanced wound grafts can significantly improve healing for certain chronic and non-healing wounds. These products—often made from biologic materials or engineered tissue—are designed to support tissue regeneration when standard wound care alone is not enough. Yet many patients are surprised to learn that hospitals often do not offer advanced grafts, even when wounds are slow to heal.

This gap can feel confusing or frustrating, especially when patients hear about advanced grafts online or from outpatient wound clinics. The reality is that the decision is rarely about whether advanced grafts work. Instead, it usually comes down to reimbursement rules, care setting limitations, documentation requirements, and hospital financial risk.

Understanding why hospitals don’t typically offer advanced grafts can help patients navigate care more confidently and know when and where to ask about advanced wound therapies.

What Are Advanced Wound Grafts?

Advanced wound grafts—sometimes called cellular or tissue-based products—are specialized therapies designed to support healing in chronic or stalled wounds. Rather than simply covering a wound, these products help create an environment that supports tissue repair and regeneration.

They are most often considered for wounds that have not responded to standard treatments such as regular dressings, offloading, compression, or debridement.

Types of Advanced Wound Grafts Used in Care

Advanced grafts may differ in structure and source, but they are all designed to support tissue repair when standard wound care fails.

Common categories include:

  • Cellular or tissue-based products (CTPs)
  • Acellular dermal matrices
  • Placental or amniotic-based grafts
  • Bioengineered skin substitutes

These therapies are typically reserved for specific wound types, such as diabetic foot ulcers, venous leg ulcers, or pressure injuries, and require careful patient selection.

Why Hospitals Rarely Use Advanced Grafts

Hospitals are primarily designed to treat acute medical problems—conditions that require immediate stabilization or short-term intervention. While wound care does occur in hospitals, the focus is usually on addressing urgent issues rather than long-term wound healing.

This distinction plays a major role in why advanced grafts are rarely used during hospital stays.

How Hospital Wound Care Differs From Outpatient Care

Hospitals and outpatient wound clinics serve different roles within the healthcare system.

Hospitals typically focus on:

  • Stabilizing acute medical conditions
  • Treating infection or sepsis
  • Performing urgent surgical interventions
  • Managing pain, blood sugar, or circulation issues
  • Preparing patients for safe discharge

Outpatient wound clinics focus on:

  • Long-term wound healing
  • Serial wound measurements and documentation
  • Advanced therapies, including grafts
  • Ongoing follow-up and reassessment over weeks or months

Advanced grafts align much more closely with outpatient care models than with short inpatient stays.

Reimbursement Is the Biggest Barrier

One of the most significant reasons hospitals don’t offer advanced grafts is the way hospital care is reimbursed.

Hospitals are typically paid through bundled payment systems, such as Diagnosis-Related Groups (DRGs).  Under these models, the hospital receives a fixed payment for an entire hospital stay based on diagnosis, regardless of how many services or supplies are used.

Advanced grafts are expensive, and their cost is usually not reimbursed separately when used in inpatient settings. This means the hospital would need to absorb the cost within a fixed payment, often resulting in a financial loss.

Why Advanced Grafts Are Hard to Cover in Hospitals

Advanced grafts create financial and compliance challenges for hospitals.

Key reimbursement barriers include:

  • Fixed DRG payments that do not account for graft cost
  • No separate inpatient reimbursement for most grafts
  • High audit risk if documentation is incomplete
  • Financial loss when graft costs exceed bundled payments

Because hospitals must carefully manage costs and compliance, many choose not to offer grafts during inpatient stays.

Coverage Rules Differ by Setting

Insurance coverage for advanced grafts often depends on where care is delivered. Medicare and many private insurers apply different rules to inpatient and outpatient settings

Advanced grafts are most commonly covered only in outpatient wound clinics, where specific criteria must be met.

Outpatient Coverage Requirements for Advanced Grafts

Most insurers require strict criteria before covering advanced graft therapy.

Typical requirements include:

  • Wound duration of four weeks or longer
  • Failure of standard wound care
  • Adequate blood flow to the affected area
  • Infection control prior to graft placement
  • Detailed wound measurements and photographic documentation

These requirements are difficult to meet during short hospital stays, where wounds are often still being stabilized.

Length of Hospital Stay Limits Advanced Therapies

Advanced grafts are designed for wounds that are monitored over time. Hospitals, however, focus on short admissions that often last only a few days.

Because advanced grafts require serial assessments, follow-up applications, and documentation of wound response, they do not fit well into the inpatient care model.

Hospitals are more likely to stabilize the wound and then refer patients to outpatient wound clinics for ongoing treatment.

Documentation and Compliance Burdens

Advanced grafts come with extensive documentation requirements to meet payer and regulatory standards. This includes precise wound measurements, proof of prior treatment failure, and
consistent follow-up documentation.

Why Documentation Matters for Advanced Grafts

Advanced grafts require more documentation than standard dressings.

Documentation often includes: Baseline wound measurements

  • Serial progress notes show in lack of improvement
  • Evidence that standard treatments were attempted first
  • Compliance with payer-specific coverage criteria

Hospital workflows are not typically designed to support this level of wound-specific documentation during acute admissions.

Inventory and Storage Challenges

Even when clinically appropriate, hospitals face logistical challenges with stocking advanced grafts.

Practical Barriers Hospitals Face With Grafts

Common challenges include:

  • Limited shelf life of graft products
  • Special storage and handling requirements
  • Risk of unused or expired inventory
  • Low inpatient utilization rates

Outpatient wound clinics are better equipped to manage these challenges because grafts are used regularly and predictably.

Clinical Stability Comes First in Hospitals

In the hospital setting, the priority is stabilizing the patient. Many patients with chronic wounds are admitted due to complications such as infection, uncontrolled blood sugar, poor circulation, or pain.

Why Timing Matters for Advanced Wound Therapies

Advanced grafts are most effective once the wound environment is optimized.

Hospitals typically prioritize:

  • Infection control
  • Blood sugar management
  • Circulation assessment
  • Surgical debridement when necessary

Once these factors are addressed, patients are often discharged and referred for outpatient wound management.

Why Outpatient Wound Clinics Use Advanced Grafts More Often

Outpatient wound clinics are specifically designed to manage chronic and non-healing wounds.

What Makes Wound Clinics Better Equipped for Grafts

Outpatient wound centers typically offer:

  • Dedicated wound care specialists
  • Established protocols for advanced graft use
  • Staff trained in documentation and compliance
  • Billing systems aligned with graft reimbursement
  • Regular follow-up schedules

These features make outpatient settings the primary place where advanced grafts are used.

What This Means for Patients

If you are hospitalized with a chronic or non-healing wound, the absence of advanced graft therapy does not mean it is inappropriate or unavailable. It usually means the therapy is better suited for outpatient care once you are medically stable.

Most patients receive:

  • Initial wound stabilization in the hospital
  • Infection control or debridement as needed
  • Discharge planning with referral to a wound clinic

Advanced grafts may then be introduced when outpatient criteria are met.

Questions Patients Can Ask About Advanced Grafts

Patients can play an active role by asking informed questions, such as:

  • Am I a candidate for advanced graft therapy?
  • Has my wound met coverage criteria yet?
  • When should I be referred to a wound care clinic?
  • What treatments need to be tried first?

These conversations help ensure timely referrals and appropriate care.

How Timing and Wound Readiness Affect Graft Decisions

Another reason advanced grafts are rarely offered during hospital stays is that wounds must meet specific readiness criteria before these therapies can be effective. Advanced grafts are not intended to be applied to unstable wounds. Instead, they work best when the wound environment is optimized.

If infection is present, swelling is uncontrolled, or dead tissue remains, grafts are unlikely to succeed. Hospitals often focus first on correcting these issues. This may include treating infection with antibiotics, reducing swelling, improving blood sugar control, or performing surgical debridement.

Only after these factors are addressed can a wound be considered “ready” for advanced therapy. In many cases, this readiness is achieved after discharge, once the patient is stable and able to attend regular follow-up visits.

Why Advanced Grafts Are Not Emergency Treatments

It’s understandable for patients to assume that advanced grafts should be used as soon as a wound is identified. However, these products are not emergency interventions. They are part of a stepwise wound care approach that builds on foundational treatments.

Standard wound care—including pressure relief, moisture balance, infection control, and circulation support—must come first. Skipping these steps reduces the likelihood that a graft will work and increases the risk of complications.

Hospitals prioritize interventions that address immediate medical needs. Advanced grafts are typically considered once those needs are resolved and the wound has shown that it is not responding to standard care alone.

Why Hospitals Emphasize Discharge Planning Instead

During hospitalization, care teams are often working toward a clear goal: stabilizing the patient and preparing for discharge. For patients with chronic wounds, this means creating a plan for continued care outside the hospital.

Discharge planning may include:

  • Arranging home health services
  • Scheduling outpatient wound clinic visits
  • Ensuring access to appropriate dressings
  • Coordinating follow-up with specialists

Introducing advanced grafts during a hospital stay can complicate this process without providing long-term benefit. Outpatient settings allow for consistent monitoring and timely adjustments that are difficult to achieve during short admissions.

How Insurance Authorization Shapes Access

Even when advanced grafts are clinically appropriate, insurance authorization often determines when and where they can be used. Many payers require documentation over several weeks to demonstrate that standard treatments have failed.

Hospital stays are usually too brief to generate the longitudinal data insurers require. Outpatient wound clinics are structured to track progress over time, making them better positioned to obtain authorization for advanced therapies.

This administrative reality plays a significant role in why grafts are delayed until after discharge.

What Patients Can Do to Avoid Delays

While system barriers exist, patients can take steps to reduce delays in accessing advanced wound therapies.

Helpful actions include:

  • Asking early for a wound clinic referral
  • Attending follow-up appointments consistently
  • Following wound care instructions closely
  • Managing underlying conditions such as diabetes or swelling
  • Reporting lack of improvement promptly

Being proactive helps ensure that wounds are evaluated for advanced therapies as soon as criteria are met.

Understanding the Bigger Picture of Wound Care

Advanced grafts are one tool within a broader wound care strategy. Successful healing depends on addressing circulation, pressure, infection, nutrition, and mobility alongside any advanced therapy.

Hospitals focus on the acute phase of care. Outpatient wound clinics focus on long-term healing. When these roles work together, patients receive more effective and appropriate treatment.

Recognizing this division can reduce frustration and help patients understand why care transitions are not delays—but necessary steps toward healing.

Reassurance for Patients Feeling Overlooked

It can be discouraging to feel like advanced options are being withheld. In most cases, the absence of advanced grafts during hospitalization reflects system constraints rather than lack of concern.

Care teams aim to deliver the right treatment at the right time in the right setting. For advanced grafts, that setting is usually outpatient wound care.

Knowing what to expect helps patients advocate for themselves and stay engaged in the healing process.

The Bottom Line: Hospital vs Outpatient Wound Care

Hospitals don’t typically offer advanced grafts not because they lack effectiveness, but because of reimbursement structures, care setting limitations, documentation requirements, and financial risk.

Advanced grafts are most often delivered in outpatient wound clinics, where workflows and coverage rules support their use. Understanding this distinction can help patients advocate for appropriate referrals and avoid delays in care.

If you have a chronic or non-healing wound and are unsure whether advanced graft therapy may be appropriate, ask for a referral to a specialized outpatient wound care clinic. A wound care specialist can evaluate your wound, review coverage criteria, and help determine whether advanced therapies may support healing.

1. Wounds International. (2025, June 5). Quick guide: Skin substitutes for the management of hard-to-heal wounds. Wounds International.

2. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. (2024, October). Design and development of the diagnosis related group (DRGs) (FY2025 Version 42.0). U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.

3. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. (2025). Billing and coding: Application of bioengineered skin substitutes to lower extremity chronic non-healing wounds (Article A54117). Medicare Coverage Database. https://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage-database/view/article.aspx?articleid=54117&ver=86

4. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General. (2024, November 15). Medicare Part B payments for skin substitutes (Work Plan project).  https://oig.hhs.gov/reports/work-plan/browse-work-plan-projects/medicare-part-b-payments-for-skin-substitutes/

5. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. (2023, August 3). Response to comments: Skin substitute grafts / cellular and/or tissue-based products for the treatment of diabetic foot ulcers and venous leg ulcers (Article A59518). Medicare Coverage Database.

If you or someone you care for has a slow-healing wound, you may hear terms like “hospital wound care,” “private wound clinic,” or “outpatient wound center.” At first glance, these options can sound interchangeable. In reality, private wound care and hospital-based wound care serve different purposes, and understanding the difference can help you get the right care at the right time.

Many patients assume hospitals always offer the most advanced wound treatments. Others worry that private wound clinics are less comprehensive. The truth is more nuanced. Each setting has strengths and limitations, and the best choice depends on your wound, your overall health, and where you are in the healing process.

This guide explains how private wound care differs from hospital wound care, what each setting is designed to do, and how to decide which option may be best for your situation.

What Is Hospital Wound Care?

Hospital wound care takes place during an inpatient stay or emergency visit. The primary goal of hospital care is medical stabilization, not long-term wound healing. [1]

Hospital teams often manage wounds that are associated with:

  • Serious infection
  • Acute trauma
  • Surgical complications
  • Poor blood sugar control
  • Circulatory emergencies
  • Systemic illness

In these situations, the wound is one part of a larger medical picture that requires urgent attention.

What Hospital Wound Care Is Designed to Do

Hospitals are structured to address immediate medical needs. [2]

Hospital wound care typically focuses on:

  • Treating infection or sepsis
  • Performing urgent debridement or surgery
  • Managing pain
  • Stabilizing blood sugar or circulation
  • Preventing further tissue damage
  • Preparing the patient for safe discharge

Once the patient is stable, ongoing wound healing is usually continued elsewhere.

What Is Private Wound Care?

Private wound care is typically delivered in outpatient wound clinics, specialty practices, or private wound centers. [3] These settings are designed specifically for long-term wound management rather than acute stabilization.

Private wound care often focuses on chronic or non-healing wounds that require weeks or months of treatment and close monitoring.

What Private Wound Care Is Designed to Do

Private wound clinics are built around healing progression over time.

They commonly focus on:

This setting is where most advanced wound treatments occur.

Key Differences Between Private and Hospital Wound Care

Although both settings treat wounds, their goals, workflows, and treatment options differ significantly.

Care Goals

Hospital care prioritizes acute medical safety. The goal is to stabilize the patient and address urgent problems.

Private wound care prioritizes healing outcomes. The goal is to close the wound, prevent recurrence, and improve quality of life.

Length of Care

Hospital stays are usually short, often lasting days.

Private wound care involves ongoing visits over weeks or months, allowing providers to adjust treatment based on progress.

Treatment Scope

Hospital wound care typically uses:

  • Basic dressings
  • Infection control measures
  • Surgical intervention when necessary

Private wound care may include:

  • Advanced dressings
  • Compression therapy
  • Offloading devices
  • Negative pressure wound therapy
  • Advanced grafts or biologic therapies

Why Advanced Wound Treatments Are More Common in Private Care

Many advanced wound therapies require time, documentation, and follow-up. These treatments are rarely compatible with short hospital stays.

Advanced Therapies Often Used in Private Wound Care

Private wound clinics are more likely to offer:

  • Cellular or tissue-based products
  • Bioengineered skin substitutes
  • Serial debridement with progress tracking
  • Specialized compression systems
  • Custom offloading footwear

These therapies are introduced when standard care has failed and specific criteria are met.

Reimbursement and Coverage Differences

Insurance coverage plays a major role in where wound care is delivered.

How Hospital Reimbursement Works

Hospitals are often reimbursed through bundled payment systems.[5] This means they receive a fixed payment for an entire admission, regardless of how many wound supplies or therapies are used.

Because of this structure:

  • High-cost wound products may not be covered inpatient
  • Advanced therapies may create financial loss for hospitals
  • Hospitals may defer advanced treatments until discharge

How Private Wound Care Is Reimbursed

Outpatient wound clinics often have separate reimbursement pathways for advanced therapies, as long as coverage criteria are met.

This makes it easier for private clinics to:

  • Document wound progression
  • Demonstrate failure of standard care
  • Obtain authorization for advanced treatments

Documentation and Monitoring Differences

Wound healing requires careful tracking.[6] The ability to document progress over time is a major advantage of private wound care.

Why Ongoing Documentation Matters

Private wound clinics routinely track:

  • Wound size and depth
  • Tissue quality
  • Drainage amount
  • Response to treatment

This information guides treatment decisions and supports insurance coverage for advanced therapies.

Hospitals, managing many acute issues at once, are not designed for this level of wound-specific monitoring during short stays.

Patient Experience: What Feels Different

From a patient perspective, the experience can feel very different between settings.

What Patients Often Experience in Hospitals

Patients may notice:

  • Focus on overall medical issues
  • Limited time spent on wound education
  • Frequent provider changes
  • Emphasis on discharge planning

What Patients Often Experience in Private Wound Care

Patients often receive:

  • Dedicated wound care visits
  • Education on dressing changes and prevention
  • Consistent providers
  • Clear explanations of healing progress

This continuity can be reassuring for people living with chronic wounds.

When Hospital Wound Care Is the Right Choice

Hospital wound care is appropriate when:

  • Infection is severe or spreading
  • The wound is associated with systemic illness
  • Surgery is required
  • Circulation is critically impaired
  • Pain is uncontrolled

In these cases, hospital care is essential and lifesaving.

When Private Wound Care Is the Better Fit

Private wound care is often ideal when:

  • A wound is slow to heal but stable
  • Infection is controlled
  • The patient can attend regular visits
  • Advanced therapies are being considered
  • Long-term prevention is a priority

Many patients move from hospital care to private wound care as part of the same treatment journey.

How the Two Settings Work Together

Hospital and private wound care are not competitors. They are complementary parts of the same system.

A common care pathway includes:

  • Hospital admission for stabilization
  • Initial wound management
  • Discharge with referral
  • Ongoing treatment in a private wound clinic

Understanding this transition can reduce frustration and improve continuity of care.

Questions Patients Can Ask to Navigate Care

Asking the right questions helps ensure timely treatment.

Helpful questions include:

  • Do I need hospital-level care right now?
  • When should I transition to outpatient wound care?
  • Am I a candidate for advanced wound therapies?
  • How will my wound be monitored over time?

Common Misconceptions About Private Wound Care

Some people worry that private wound clinics are “less serious” than hospitals. In reality, they are often more specialized for chronic wound healing.

Another misconception is that hospitals always offer the most advanced treatments. Many advanced therapies are intentionally reserved for outpatient settings where they are most effective. [4]

How Care Transitions From Hospital to Private Wound Care

For many patients, wound care does not happen in just one place. Instead, it moves through different settings as needs change. Understanding this transition can reduce confusion and help patients feel more prepared.

Hospital wound care often begins when a wound is complicated by infection, pain, or another medical issue that requires close monitoring. During this phase, the priority is stabilizing the patient and preventing immediate harm. Once those goals are met, continuing wound care in the hospital usually offers diminishing returns.

Private wound care becomes more appropriate once the patient is medically stable. At that point, healing depends less on emergency intervention and more on consistent, targeted treatment over time. This handoff is intentional and reflects how the healthcare system is designed to work.

Why Some Patients Feel “Sent Home Too Soon”

It’s common for patients to feel frustrated when they are discharged from the hospital while a wound is still open. This reaction is understandable. Many people associate hospitals with complete treatment and expect wounds to be fully healed before discharge.

In reality, hospitals are not designed for long-term wound closure. Remaining hospitalized longer does not usually improve healing outcomes and may increase risks such as deconditioning, infection exposure, or loss of mobility.

Private wound clinics are where the work of gradual healing happens. Discharge does not mean care has ended—it means care is shifting to a setting better suited for the next phase of recovery.

Access and Scheduling Differences

Access to care can feel very different between hospital and private wound care settings.

Hospitals operate around urgent medical needs. Wound care may be addressed by different providers depending on staffing, shifts, or competing priorities. Appointments and follow-up are not structured around wound progression alone.

Private wound clinics are appointment-based and predictable. Patients typically see the same care team at regular intervals, which allows for continuity and trust. This consistency helps patients understand their treatment plan and track progress more clearly.

Education and Prevention: A Key Difference

One of the biggest advantages of private wound care is education. Chronic wounds often recur if underlying issues are not addressed.

Education Commonly Provided in Private Wound Care

Private wound clinics often spend time teaching patients:

  • How to change dressings safely
  • How to reduce pressure or friction
  • How to manage swelling
  • How nutrition affects healing
  • How to recognize early warning signs

Hospitals, focused on acute care, may not have the time or resources to provide this level of wound-specific education during a short stay.

The Role of Caregivers and Family

Caregivers often play a critical role in wound healing, especially for older adults or people with limited mobility.

In hospital settings, caregivers may receive minimal hands-on instruction. The focus is often on discharge logistics rather than skill-building.

Private wound clinics are more likely to involve caregivers directly. Demonstrations, written instructions, and opportunities to ask questions are more common. This support can reduce anxiety and improve adherence to treatment plans at home.

Cost Considerations From a Patient Perspective

Patients may worry that private wound care will be more expensive than hospital care. In many cases, the opposite is true.

Hospital stays are costly, and extended admissions can lead to higher out-of-pocket expenses depending on insurance coverage. Private wound care visits are usually billed as outpatient services and may be more predictable in cost.

Additionally, effective outpatient care can reduce the risk of complications that lead to rehospitalization, which is often far more expensive and disruptive.

Travel and Convenience Factors

Hospitals are often farther from home and may require long travel times or parking challenges. For patients with mobility limitations, frequent hospital visits can be exhausting.

Private wound clinics are often located within the community. Shorter visits, easier access, and familiar surroundings can make ongoing care more manageable.

Convenience matters. When care is easier to access, patients are more likely to attend appointments consistently, which directly affects healing outcomes.

How Outcomes Differ Over Time

While hospitals are essential for acute issues, long-term wound outcomes are more closely tied to consistent outpatient management.

Private wound care allows providers to:

  • Adjust treatment based on subtle changes
  • Identify stalled healing early
  • Introduce advanced therapies at the right time
  • Focus on preventing recurrence

These factors contribute to better outcomes over weeks and months, which is the timeframe most chronic wounds require.

When Patients Benefit From Both Settings

Many patients benefit from both hospital and private wound care at different stages. This is especially true for complex wounds or individuals with multiple medical conditions.

A common scenario includes:

  • Hospital admission for infection or surgical intervention
  • Initial wound stabilization
  • Discharge with a clear wound care plan
  • Ongoing treatment in a private wound clinic

Seeing these settings as part of a continuum rather than separate choices can reduce confusion and improve satisfaction.

How to Advocate for the Right Care Setting

Patients and caregivers can advocate for appropriate care by asking specific questions.

Helpful questions include:

  • Is my wound stable enough for outpatient care?
  • When should I be referred to a wound clinic?
  • What signs should prompt me to return to the hospital?
  • How will my wound be monitored over time?

Clear communication helps ensure that care transitions happen smoothly and safely.

Emotional Impact of Chronic Wounds

Living with a chronic wound can take a toll emotionally as well as physically. Pain, drainage, odor, and mobility limitations can affect confidence and daily life.

Private wound clinics often acknowledge these challenges and provide support beyond the wound itself. Feeling heard and supported can improve adherence and overall well-being.

Hospitals, focused on acute medical needs, may not always have the capacity to address these longer-term emotional concerns.

Understanding That One Size Does Not Fit All

There is no single “best” setting for wound care. The right choice depends on timing, medical stability, wound complexity, and patient circumstances.

Hospitals and private wound clinics each play essential roles. Knowing when to use each one empowers patients to seek care that aligns with their needs and supports healing at every stage.

The Bottom Line

Hospital wound care and private wound care serve different but equally important roles. Hospitals focus on stabilizing acute medical issues, while private wound clinics focus on long-term healing and prevention.

Knowing the difference helps patients understand why care may shift between settings and how to access the treatments most likely to support healing.

Call to Action

If you have a wound that isn’t healing, keeps coming back, or requires ongoing care, ask your healthcare provider whether a referral to a private outpatient wound clinic is appropriate. The right care setting can make a meaningful difference in healing, comfort, and long-term outcomes.

References:

  1. West Coast Wound Care. (2025, June 11). Why most wounds don’t heal in hospitals & what a wound care specialist can do. West Coast Wound Care.
  2. Rangachari, P., & Thapa, A. (2025). Impact of hospital and health system initiatives to address social determinants of health (SDOH) in the United States: A scoping review of the peer-reviewed literature. BMC Health Services Research, 25, Article 342.
  3. UofL Health. (n.d.). Wound care. UofL Health. Retrieved February 1, 2026, from
  4. Du, Y. L., Lim, P., Isseroff, R., & Dahle, S. (2024). Patterns of use of advanced wound matrices in the Veterans Administration clinics. Wound Repair and Regeneration, 32(2), 118–122.
  5. Wagenschieber, E., & Blunck, D. (2024). Impact of reimbursement systems on patient care – a systematic review of systematic reviews. Health Economics Review, 14, Article 22.
  6. Ernstmeyer, K., & Christman, E. (Eds.). (2021). Chapter 20: Wound care. In Nursing skills (Open RN). Chippewa Valley Technical College. In NCBI Bookshelf. National Center for Biotechnology Information.

 

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