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Upstate Carolina Medical Center Opens New Healing Center
Prepared by: Steve Wong Upstate Carolina Medical Center Marketing Phone 864-487-1515 Click Photos for High Resolution Images
GAFFNEY, SC – Everyone has heard that time heals all wounds, but the
truth is that without advanced therapies, some wounds can take years
and even decades to heal, while others that do not respond to
treatment may lead to amputation in extreme cases. Upstate Carolina
Medical Center has opened the Advanced Healing Wound Center to offer
the community state-of-the-art specialized wound care.
"With the rising rate of diabetes, there is a great need for a specialized care center that can treat the ulcers associated with the disease as well as help patients with other skin, bone and tissue conditions caused by illness or injury," Sherri Almond, R.N., the Center’s Director, said. "The center's doctors and clinical staff are skilled in the latest therapeutic methods in wound management and stay abreast of cutting-edge information through continuous training. Patients will be treated with state-of-the art technology from having their progress charted through digital photographs to, in some cases, being treated in one of the center’s two hyperbaric oxygen chambers."
To establish the center, Upstate Carolina partnered with Florida-
based National Healing Corporation, which manages wound-healing
centers nationwide with an average healing rate of 80 percent
attained in 12 to16 weeks of therapy. Although the centers treat
patients with chronic and advanced conditions that have not responded
to previous therapies, the rate of limb amputation for non-responsive
wounds is less than four percent.
"We developed a methodology that has established an impressive record of healing wounds that others thought hopeless,” Almond said. “After performing a full diagnosis on a patient's first visit, we take photographs of the wound at each subsequent visit to evaluate the therapy's progress. Our treatments are evidence based and best practice driven meaning our patients do not undergo any treatment or progress to a new level of treatment until the need is clearly indicated."
Likely candidates for treatment are those suffering from diabetic
ulcers, pressure ulcers, infections, compromised skin grafts and
flaps, and wounds that haven't healed within 30 days. The center's
hyperbaric oxygen chambers can also be used to treat patients
suffering from such uncommon ailments as cyanide poisoning, gangrene,
carbon monoxide poisoning, brown recluse spider bites, and the
"bends" or decompression sickness.
Patients covered by Medicare, Medicaid and most insurance plans may self-refer to the Advanced Health Wound Center. However, one of the center's missions is to build relationships with patients' primary care physicians.
"We become a partner in the patient's medical care," said internist
Howard Klickman, M.D., who serves as medical director at the center.
"While we dedicate our efforts to healing the patient's wound, the
primary care physician is free to focus on treating the underlying
cause or disease. Through regular reports and phone calls, we work
with the patient’s doctors and other experts in the program to
develop a total approach to treatment and care."
One of the highly specialized treatments offered at the center is hyperbaric oxygen therapy, which works by surrounding the patient with 100 percent oxygen at higher than normal atmospheric pressure. This increases the amount of oxygen in the patient's blood and, in the case of wounds, allows red blood cells to pass more easily through the plasma into the wound to heal it from the inside out. Diabetic foot wounds are an excellent example of wounds that may benefit most from this type of treatment. Relaxing on a bed encased within a large see-through acrylic shell, patients can watch movies on televisions and VCR players mounted above the chamber while hearing the movies and conversing with others outside the chamber through a speaker system. The only physical sensation resulting from the treatment is a slight pressure on the eardrum, such as that felt when a plane lands, as the air in the chamber is compressed. In addition to tissue oxygenation, the center also employs the use of vascular studies, tissue culturing and pathology, revascularization, skin grafting, and clinical or surgical debridement. For more information call the Advanced Healing Wound Center at 487-5014 located at 1445 N. Limestone St. in Gaffney. |