Results 221 to 230 of about 340,508 (268)
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Wound care specialists

Nursing Standard, 1991
I was surprised to see that you described Janet Hedges as the first wound care specialist outside London (Nursing Standard News February 13).
openaire   +2 more sources

Wound Care

Journal of Wound, Ostomy & Continence Nursing, 2008
David G, Armstrong   +3 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Wound Care Management

1991
This paper describes a computer system to aid nurses in the decision making process of selection of treatment and dressings for particular types of wound.
Elizabeth A. Butler, Angela E. Jeune
openaire   +1 more source

Paediatric wound care

Journal of Wound Care, 1997
The vast majority of wounds in children heal quickly with few or no problems. However, for those with a chronic illness, such as Crohn's disease, renal failure or neurological conditions, wound healing may be problematic because of the illness. Healing is often delayed by a poor nutritiona state, complications of surgery, infection or chemotherapy.
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Improving wound care

Nursing Standard, 1988
Nurses interested in improving wound care are next week launching a society to further the practical and educational resources for staff working in this area.
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Biofilm in wound care

British Journal of Community Nursing, 2015
A biofilm can be described as a microbial colony encased in a polysaccharide matrix which can become attached to a wound surface. This can affect the healing potential of chronic wounds due to the production of destructive enzymes and toxins which can promote a chronic inflammatory state within the wound.
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Outpatient Wound Care

Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America, 1996
As patients are discharged from the acute care setting to the home care setting at a much earlier time in their recovery, surgical wound care will be delivered by patients, family members, and home health care providers rather than by the hospital nurse in a traditional in-patient setting.
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Wound Care Dressings

Nursing Management (Springhouse), 1996
Significant advances in wound healing technologies dramatically enhance the health provider's ability to achieve optimal wound healing. Maximal success in treating both pressure and skin ulcers, however, remains with the fundamental principles of moist wound healing, pressure relief, local and systemic infection control and adequate nutrition.
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Standardisation of wound care

Nursing Standard, 1991
The bewildering array of wound care products on the market can serve to confuse rather than inform nurses working in clinical areas, and can lead to inconsistent approaches to wound management. Vicki Turner describes how she devised a wound care protocol in the form of a flowchart for her surgical orthopaedic ward, which aimed to standardise nurses ...
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EMERGENCY CARE OF WOUNDS

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1960
Unfortunately, wars have provided the greatest stimulus to advances in the treatment of wounds. Between wars, the basic principles of emergency treatment are frequently forgotten or are overlooked and have to be relearned at the expense of increased morbidity and mortality in the early phases of a new war.
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