---
name: managing-wound-assessment-nursing
language: en
description: Structures wound assessment with measurement, staging, and treatment plan documentation. Use when assessing wounds, staging pressure injuries, or documenting wound care.
tags:
  - management
  - nursing
  - treatment
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Nursing
    - Advanced Practice
    - Nurse Practitioner
  document_types:
    - Management Report
  skill_modes:
    - Management
    - Coordination
---

# Managing Wound Assessment Nursing

## Why This Skill Exists

Wound assessment and staging accuracy directly affects patient outcomes, reimbursement, and regulatory compliance. The NPUAP/EPUAP/PPPIA International Pressure Injury Guidelines define the staging system and evidence-based prevention/treatment standards. WOCN Society guidelines provide the clinical framework for wound measurement and documentation. CMS considers hospital-acquired pressure injuries (HAPI) a Never Event (Stage 3, Stage 4, and Unstageable acquired after admission), which eliminates additional reimbursement for associated treatment costs. Joint Commission requires pressure injury risk assessment on admission and per institutional policy. NDNQI tracks pressure injury prevalence as a nursing-sensitive quality indicator. Inaccurate staging, inconsistent measurement, or incomplete documentation exposes the institution to regulatory penalties and malpractice liability.

---

## Checkpoint A — Intake Verification

### Required Patient Information
- [ ] Wound history: onset, duration, mechanism of injury, prior treatments
- [ ] Comorbidities affecting wound healing: diabetes (HbA1c value), peripheral vascular disease, venous insufficiency, immunosuppression, malnutrition, smoking status
- [ ] Current Braden Scale score (reference managing-skin-integrity skill)
- [ ] Nutritional status: albumin, prealbumin, total protein, BMI, current dietary intake
- [ ] Current medications affecting healing: corticosteroids, anticoagulants, immunosuppressants, chemotherapy
- [ ] Vascular assessment for lower extremity wounds: ABI (ankle-brachial index), peripheral pulse status

### Required Equipment and References
- [ ] Disposable measuring device (ruler or wound measurement guide in centimeters)
- [ ] NPUAP/EPUAP pressure injury staging definitions
- [ ] WOCN wound documentation template or institutional wound assessment form
- [ ] Wound photography equipment per institutional policy (with patient consent)
- [ ] Appropriate wound care supplies based on wound type

---

## Step 1 — Classify the Wound Type

Determine wound etiology before staging or treatment planning:

1. **Pressure injury** — caused by prolonged pressure over bony prominence; stage per NPUAP system
2. **Venous insufficiency ulcer** — typically medial malleolus, irregular borders, shallow, with surrounding hemosiderin staining and edema
3. **Arterial insufficiency ulcer** — typically distal (toes, feet), regular borders, deep with pale/necrotic base, absent pulses, ABI < 0.9
4. **Diabetic/neuropathic ulcer** — typically plantar surface, callused borders, associated with neuropathy and deformity
5. **Surgical wound** — healing by primary, secondary, or tertiary intention
6. **Traumatic wound** — mechanism-specific (laceration, abrasion, avulsion, puncture)
7. **Moisture-associated skin damage (MASD)** — distinguish from pressure injury; caused by exposure to urine, stool, perspiration, or wound drainage

---

## Step 2 — Stage Pressure Injuries Per NPUAP Classification

Apply the 2016 NPUAP Pressure Injury Staging System:

1. **Stage 1** — intact skin with non-blanchable erythema; may appear differently in darkly pigmented skin (look for temperature change, firmness, edema)
2. **Stage 2** — partial-thickness loss with exposed dermis; wound bed is pink/red, moist; may present as intact or ruptured serum-filled blister; no slough or eschar
3. **Stage 3** — full-thickness skin loss; subcutaneous fat may be visible; slough may be present but does not obscure depth; undermining/tunneling may occur
4. **Stage 4** — full-thickness skin and tissue loss with exposed fascia, muscle, tendon, ligament, cartilage, or bone; slough or eschar may be present
5. **Unstageable** — full-thickness loss with wound bed obscured by slough and/or eschar; true depth cannot be determined until slough/eschar removed
6. **Deep Tissue Pressure Injury (DTPI)** — intact or non-intact skin with localized area of persistent non-blanchable deep red, maroon, or purple discoloration, or epidermal separation revealing dark wound bed or blood-filled blister

Critical rule: **Pressure injuries do not reverse-stage.** A healing Stage 4 is documented as "Stage 4, healing" — never downgraded to Stage 3.

---

## Step 3 — Measure and Document Wound Dimensions

Using WOCN standardized measurement methodology:

1. **Length** — measure the longest distance head-to-toe (12 o'clock to 6 o'clock) in centimeters
2. **Width** — measure the widest distance perpendicular to length (3 o'clock to 9 o'clock) in centimeters
3. **Depth** — insert moistened cotton-tipped applicator at deepest point, mark at skin level, measure in centimeters
4. **Undermining** — document using clock-face method (e.g., "2 cm undermining from 2 o'clock to 5 o'clock")
5. **Tunneling** — document depth and direction using clock-face method (e.g., "3 cm tunneling at 9 o'clock")
6. **Photograph** per institutional protocol: include patient identifier, date, ruler in frame, consistent lighting and angle

---

## Step 4 — Assess the Wound Bed and Periwound Tissue

1. **Wound bed tissue type** and percentage:
   - Epithelial (pink, new skin growth at edges)
   - Granulation (beefy red, moist, bumpy)
   - Slough (yellow, tan, or gray; soft, moist, stringy dead tissue)
   - Eschar (black or brown; hard, dry, leathery dead tissue)
   - Example: "Wound bed 60% granulation, 30% slough, 10% eschar"
2. **Exudate** — type (serous, sanguineous, serosanguineous, purulent), amount (none, scant, small, moderate, large), odor (none, faint, moderate, strong)
3. **Wound edges** — attached, not attached, rolled/epibole, undermined, fibrotic, callused
4. **Periwound skin** — intact, macerated, erythematous, indurated, denuded, excoriated; measure erythema extent
5. **Signs of infection** — increased pain, warmth, erythema, edema, purulent drainage, foul odor, elevated WBC, fever; document and notify provider

---

## Step 5 — Apply the Bates-Jensen Wound Assessment Tool (BWAT)

For ongoing wound monitoring, score the BWAT (13 items, scored 1–5 each):

1. Size (surface area)
2. Depth
3. Edges
4. Undermining
5. Necrotic tissue type
6. Necrotic tissue amount
7. Exudate type
8. Exudate amount
9. Skin color surrounding wound
10. Peripheral tissue edema
11. Peripheral tissue induration
12. Granulation tissue
13. Epithelialization

Total score range: 13 (wound healed) to 65 (wound degeneration). Track score trending over time to document healing trajectory or deterioration.

---

## Step 6 — Develop the Wound Care Treatment Plan

1. **Wound cleansing**: normal saline irrigation at 4–15 psi (per WOCN recommendation) unless contraindicated
2. **Debridement** method if indicated: autolytic (moisture-retentive dressing), enzymatic (collagenase), sharp (physician/WOCN), mechanical (wet-to-dry — used infrequently, only for specific indications)
3. **Dressing selection** based on wound bed characteristics:
   - Dry wound → hydrogel or honey-based to donate moisture
   - Moderate exudate → foam or alginate
   - Heavy exudate → alginate, hydrofiber, or NPWT
   - Infected → silver-containing dressing per provider order
   - Granulating, moist → maintain with non-adherent dressing
4. **Offloading** for pressure injuries: repositioning schedule, specialty surface, heel elevation
5. **Nutritional optimization**: protein supplementation (1.25–1.5 g/kg/day), vitamin C, zinc, adequate hydration per dietitian recommendation
6. **Referrals**: WOCN nurse, vascular surgery (for ABI < 0.5 or limb-threatening ischemia), infectious disease (for osteomyelitis concern), plastic surgery (for complex closures)

---

## Step 7 — Document the Wound Assessment

Create a complete wound assessment entry per institutional format:

1. Wound location (anatomical landmarks)
2. Wound type and etiology
3. Stage (for pressure injuries; or classification for other wound types)
4. Dimensions: L × W × D in cm; undermining and tunneling with clock-face notation
5. Wound bed description with tissue type percentages
6. Exudate characteristics
7. Periwound skin condition
8. Signs/symptoms of infection (present or absent)
9. Pain level at wound site
10. Dressing applied and wound care performed
11. Patient/caregiver education provided
12. Referrals made

---

## Checkpoint B — Documentation and Plan Review

### Completeness Check
- [ ] Wound classification/staging is consistent with NPUAP definitions
- [ ] All measurement dimensions documented in centimeters using standardized clock-face orientation
- [ ] Wound bed, exudate, edges, and periwound thoroughly described
- [ ] Treatment plan documented with clinical rationale
- [ ] Healing trajectory tracked (BWAT score trending or dimensional trending)
- [ ] Provider notified of any wound deterioration, new infection signs, or non-healing wounds
- [ ] WOCN consultation requested for complex or non-healing wounds

### Regulatory Compliance Check
- [ ] Hospital-acquired pressure injury (HAPI) identified and reported per institutional policy
- [ ] Present-on-admission wounds documented within 24 hours per CMS requirements
- [ ] Wound prevention interventions documented per Braden-based care plan
- [ ] Wound care orders are current and match the treatment actually provided

---

## Quality Audit

- [ ] Pressure injury staging matches NPUAP 2016 criteria exactly (no reverse-staging)
- [ ] Measurements use centimeters with consistent orientation method
- [ ] MASD differentiated from pressure injury in documentation
- [ ] BWAT or equivalent wound tracking tool scored at each assessment interval
- [ ] Nutritional intervention documented for all patients with wounds
- [ ] Wound reassessment documented per institutional schedule (typically weekly for chronic wounds, with each dressing change for acute wounds)
- [ ] HAPI prevalence data submitted per NDNQI reporting requirements
- [ ] Photography consent obtained and images stored per institutional policy
- [ ] Documentation supports CMS defense against Never Event claims (present-on-admission documentation)
- [ ] Wound care matches current evidence-based guidelines (WOCN, NPUAP/EPUAP/PPPIA)

---

## Guidelines

- **NPUAP/EPUAP/PPPIA**: International Pressure Injury Guidelines define staging, prevention, and treatment standards
- **WOCN Society**: Clinical practice guidelines for wound assessment, measurement, documentation, and management
- **CMS**: Hospital-acquired Stage 3, 4, and Unstageable pressure injuries are classified as Never Events; present-on-admission documentation is mandatory
- **Joint Commission**: Requires pressure injury risk assessment on admission and ongoing per institutional policy
- **NDNQI**: Pressure injury prevalence is a nursing-sensitive quality indicator reported quarterly
- **Bates-Jensen Wound Assessment Tool**: Standardized tool for tracking wound healing trajectory; validated for use across wound types
- **Braden Scale**: Risk assessment tool that drives prevention interventions (reference managing-skin-integrity skill)
- **Scope of practice**: RN performs wound assessment and documents staging; WOCN provides expert consultation; sharp debridement is provider- or WOCN-performed depending on state scope of practice; LPN/LVN may perform wound care under RN supervision per state Nurse Practice Act
- **Documentation standard**: Wound assessment must be defensible in medical-legal review — incomplete documentation of present-on-admission status can result in facility liability for HAPI claims
