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Wound care presents a significant, yet often under-prioritised, challenge within the UK healthcare system. Despite affecting millions of patients and costing the NHS an estimated £8.3 billion annually (based on data primarily from England), wound management remains highly variable across regions, specialties, and care settings throughout the UK. This article explores the impact of inconsistent clinical practice, the economic implications of chronic and non-healing wounds, and the inequities experienced by patients, especially those with complex care needs. It also highlights the absence of a UK wound care database, which would enable the systemic and standardised monitoring of patient numbers, wound type prevalence, healing rates, and complications. A national wound care database would support quality assurance through the monitoring of outcomes, allow for benchmarking among healthcare providers as well as supporting the provision of robust data for research. Furthermore, it would strengthen healthcare policy, guideline development and support more efficient allocation of resources and commissioning across the four nations of the UK. This lack of coordinated data hinders meaningful research and service planning, quality improvement, equitable evidence-based care, and the opportunity to inform appropriate commissioning and targeted investment. Key strategies are proposed including the adoption of standardised pathways, investment in education, and the development of a UK-wide data infrastructure to support a more coordinated, evidence-based, and cost-effective approach to wound care in the UK.
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Jackie Stephen‐Haynes
Birmingham City University
Louise Toner
Birmingham City University
British Journal of Nursing
University of Birmingham
Birmingham City University
The Edgbaston Hospital
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Stephen‐Haynes et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1c691394dbf6307b2fbd04 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.12968/bjon.2025.0428