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Advance Nursing Practice 2018

J u n e 2 1 - 2 2 , 2 0 1 8

P a r i s , F r a n c e

Page 27

Journal of Nursing and Health Studies

ISSN 2574-2825

6

t h

I n t e r n a t i o n a l C o n f e r e n c e o n

Advance Nursing Practice

Introduction:

The incidence of complex wounds is high and wound management is a significant expense for patients and health

services. In addition, a wound has significant impact on quality of life of patients and carers. With early identification of patients

at risk, wound incidence and severity can be reduced, improving the patient and carer experience and bringing significant cost

savings. A new position of nurse practitioner – chronic and complex wound management (NPCCWM) was created as part of SWIM.

Aim:

With proactive wound management the patient and carer experience can be improved, wound healing times can be

reduced therefore resulting in significant cost savings. This model of care proposes an integrated approach to the prevention

and management of complex wounds within NSLHD. Providing patient-centred, interdisciplinary wound and skin integrity

management, this model of care will measure wound prevention and management activity and outcomes in response to this new

model of care and how the introduction of the NPCCWM has impacted service delivery.

Methods:

Mixed method

Progress:

The model will be described (and the outcomes to be measured) to demonstrate changes in response to the new model

of care. This will include 1) patient and carer: level of engagement and satisfaction with wound prevention and management,

access to wound services, quality of care in wound prevention and management, reduced healing times and reduction of wound

recurrence. 2) Organisational: nurse practitioner- chronic and complex wound management, clinical practice and documentation

standards, work force training, cost-efficiencies and clinician satisfaction

1. Campbell P and M Rodgers (2012) Skin Integrity Model of Care, N CGU, Editor.

2. Australia W (2016) Standards for wound prevention and management. Cambridge Media: Osborne Park.

3. International W (2013) Principles of compression therapy in venous disease: a practitioner's guide to treatment and prevention

of venous leg ulcers.

4. Moore Z, G Butcher and L Corbett et al (2014) Exploring the concept of a team approach to wound care: managing wounds

as a team. J Wound. doi:10.12968/jowc.2014.23.Sup5b.S1.

5. Moore Z et al (2015) eHealth in Wound Care, overview and key issues to consider before implementation. Journal of Wound Care.

Biography

Catherine Johnson has worked extensively in the field of wound management, plastic reconstructive surgery, ENT, head and neck surgery in the London (where she trained) and

in Australia. She has a Master of Nursing Nurse Practitioner from Sydney University and is a Guest Lecturer for many organisations, including University of Technology Sydney.

The ministry of health and primary health networks across NSW. She currently works as a Nurse Practitioner in Complex Wound Management in the community setting and is the

Clinical Lead for the Skin and Wound Integrated Model of Care, which she will talk to us about today.

Catherine.Johnson1@health.nsw.gov.au

Skin and wound integrity model of care (SWIM): an innovative,

integrated, patient-centred model for wound management

across one local health district in the Sydney Metropolitan

area – the view from a nurse practitioner perspective

Catherine Johnson, Peter Campbell and Susan Monaro

Northern Sydney Local Health District, Australia

Catherine Johnson et al., J Nurs Health Stud 2018, Volume: 3

DOI: 10.21767/2574-2825-C3-008