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Dermatologists should be central to wound care, expert says


 

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The way Dr. Adam Friedman sees it, dermatologists deserve a prominent place at the table when it comes to the treatment of acute and chronic wounds.

“As masters of the integument, we should be central to wound care, whether it be for research, in terms of developing better technologies, medications, approaches, diagnostics, but also in terms of managing these wounds, given the rich breadth of pathophysiology and biology we learn during our residency and maintain during our continuing education as practicing dermatologists,” said Dr. Friedman of the department of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington.

When the Journal of Drugs in Dermatology invited Dr. Friedman to serve as guest editor for a special feature section on wound care for its July 2015 issue, he jumped at the chance “to give the dermatology community a small taste of what’s going on in the wound healing world.”

Currently, he said, there is wide variability in the types of clinicians leading wound care centers in the United States, with dermatologists often sitting on the sidelines. “At one institution, it may be the vascular surgery service, at others it may be the family medicine service or even the emergency medicine department,” said Dr. Friedman, who is an editorial advisor to Dermatology News.

“That’s a big problem, in that there’s no uniformity from one center to the next in terms of who is expected to and should be taking responsibility for the wound healing service at their institutions. The reality is, it should be an interdisciplinary team, which not only involves dermatology but vascular surgery, nutrition, internal medicine, subspecialties of medicine like rheumatology, and rehab medicine. However, what is happening more often than not is that you’re getting just one or two of these elements, which cannot be as effective because you miss out on a broader, holistic view.”

Dr. Emily Stamell Ruiz

Dr. Emily Stamell Ruiz

There are two chief reasons why dermatologists aren’t more involved in wound care management, he continued. One stems from a lack of training on the topic. In one of the abstracts from the special JDD wound care section, researchers led by Dr. Emily Stamell Ruiz conducted an online survey of dermatology residents in the United States, to ask them about their preparedness to care for wounds and to assess the amount and type of training devoted to wound care during residency. Of the 175 respondents, 78% and 85% did not feel prepared to manage acute and chronic wounds, respectively, while 77% felt that more education is needed during their residency (J Drugs Dermatol. 2015;14[7]:716-20). “Residents felt that there was a clinical as well as a didactical gap, so they felt that they needed more training both through lectures as well as in clinics,” said Dr. Ruiz of the department of dermatology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston. “It’s not just a focal problem, it really is a universal curriculum problem. Future reforms to the current dermatology curriculum to include wound care training could help close the gap in wound care training.”

Another reason why dermatologists aren’t more involved in wound care management is the time commitment, said Dr. Friedman, who is also director of translational research at George Washington. The treatment of chronic wounds is “physically and financially burdensome,” he said. “It takes not only yourself being comfortable with managing the whole patient which includes the wound[s] with a side order of comorbidities, but your support staff as well – having nurses who know how to use the different wound dressings and how to help you with debridement. You need the right infrastructure. It also costs a lot on the provider side to manage wounds. You need a setup where you can get these patients in, have support staff to help with the wound dressings once you’ve identified what’s necessary, and be able to move on to the next patient.”

In another manuscript contained in the JDD special section, Dr. Friedman and his associates retrospectively reviewed the characteristics of 51 patients with burn injuries who were seen by seven different dermatologists at the Einstein-Montefiore division of dermatology from April 2010 to July 2014 (J Drugs Dermatol. 2015;14[7]:721-4). It found that the main mechanism of injury was burn from hot metal (22%), followed by contact with hot liquids (18%). It also found that silver sulfadiazine was the most commonly prescribed treatment, “even though there are considerable data illustrating that its use will delay wound closure and healing (J Invest Dermatol. 2015 May;135[5]:1459-62),” Dr. Friedman said. He went on to note that for patients who suffer an acute burn, “the ability to access a dermatologist is somewhat limited because their schedules are heavily booked well in advance, and the format doesn’t allow for these types of emergencies. More often than not they go to the ED or to primary care. That might not necessarily be the right decision because these are physicians who may not have the necessary training in terms of not only proper burn care, but skin care overall.”

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