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Background: Evidence shows that ongoing accurate wound assessments using valid and reliable measurement methods is essential to effective wound monitoring and better wound care management. Relying on subjective interpretation in measuring wound dimensions and assuming a rectilinear shape of all wounds renders an inconsistent and inaccurate wound area measurement.
Objective: The authors investigated the discrepancy in wound area measurements using a DWMS versus TPR methods and compared debridement codes submitted for reimbursement by assessment method.
Methods: The width and length of 177 wounds in 56 patients were measured at an outpatient clinic in the United States using the TPR method (width × length formula) and a DWMS (traced wound dimensions). The maximal allowable payment for debridement was calculated for both methods using the reported CPT codes based on each 20-cm2 estimated surface area.
Results: The average wound surface area was significantly higher with the TPR method than with the DWMS (20.20 and 12.81, respectively; P = .025). For patients with dark skin tones, ill-defined wound edges, irregular wound shapes, unhealthy tissues, and the presence of necrotic tissues, the use of the DWMS resulted in significantly lower mean differences in wound area measurements of 14.4 cm2 (P < .008), 8.2 cm2 (P = .040), 6.8 cm2 (P = .045), 13.1 cm2 (P = .036), and 7.6 cm2 (P = .043), respectively, compared with the TPR method. Use of the DWMS for wound surface area measurement resulted in a 10.6% lower reimbursement amount for debridement, with 82 fewer submitted codes, compared with the TPR method.
Conclusions: Compared with the DWMS, TPR measurements overestimated wound area more than 36.6%. This overestimation was associated with dark skin tones and wounds with irregular edges, irregular shapes, and necrotic tissue.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.25270/wnds/23031 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Public Health Surveill
September 2025
Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, 755 Comendador Elias Jafet Street, L1 Floor, Room 134, São Paulo, 05653-000, Brazil.
Background: The Brazilian project, launched in 2021, aims to establish a nationwide injury registry that systematically collects detailed information on incidents and individuals across the country, regardless of injury severity. The registry integrates information from prehospital and hospital care, various health systems lacking interoperability, and data from sectors such as firefighters and police. Its primary aim is to enhance health surveillance by providing timely, high-quality information that guides prevention strategies and informs policymaking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBraz Oral Res
September 2025
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais - UFMG, School of Dentistry, Department of Child and Adolescent's Oral Health, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil.
Understanding recurrent injuries in the deciduous dentition and possible associated factors could help in the control and prevention of such episodes in children. The aim of the present study was to investigate the frequency of recurrent injuries in the deciduous dentition and associated factors. A retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted involving 517 children aged between six months and six years treated at the Clinic for Traumatic Dental Injuries in the Deciduous Dentition of the School of Dentistry of the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Bras Enferm
September 2025
Universidade Federal do Ceará. Fortaleza, Ceará, Brazil.
Objectives: to assess nursing students' skills in surgical wound care before and after clinical simulation.
Methods: a quasi-experimental before-and-after study was conducted with 50 nursing students at a federal public university. Data collection occurred in three stages: assessment of students'skills before clinical simulation; application of the simulated scenario; assessment of skills after clinical simulation.
Lakartidningen
September 2025
-doktorand, ST--läkare, institutionen för -kirurgiska vetenskaper, Uppsala -universitet; VO ortopedi och handkirurgi, -Akademiska sjuk-huset, Uppsala.
Thoracic and lumbar fractures are common injuries that can be treated either surgically or non-surgically. This study investigated if socioeconomic and demographic factors influence treatment choices in Sweden using data from the Swedish Fracture Register and other national health registers. Results showed no significant association between socioeconomic factors and treatment choices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLakartidningen
September 2025
docent, överläkare, ortopedkliniken, Universitets-sjukhuset Örebro.
Spinal fractures are common, and distinct epidemiological patterns are well-known.In the young to middle age, high energy trauma is the most common etiology, and men are more afflicted than women. In the geriatric population, osteoporotic vertebral fractures are common, and in this age category the women are most often affected.
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