Wound Care

Ostomy Wound Management (OWM) is the number one choice of advanced practice wound care clinicians working across all care settings.

OWM is the premier peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary journal specifically dedicated to advanced practice clinicians who specialize in wound care across all care settings including hospitals, wound clinics, nursing homes, and home care. Since 1985, this top medical journal has covered the expanding discipline of wound management, as well as issues in ostomy care, incontinence care, and related skin and nutritional issues.

Published monthly, OWM is indexed on PubMed and publishes original research, literature reviews, and case studies. All feature articles undergo rigorous, double-blinded peer review by members of the Editorial Advisory and Editorial Review Boards. OWM is an official journal of the Association for the Advancement of Wound Care (AAWC).

Today's Wound Clinic is the only journal targeting key decision-makers within the wound care clinic, a rapidly growing market in wound care.

Today's Wound Clinic provides practical and timely insight into operational and practice management issues inherent to the success of a wound care center. The publication is the leading medical journal for clinicians in a wound care clinic setting. In addition to being a bimonthly print publication, Today’s Wound Clinic offers six online exclusive issues each year.

Today's Wound Clinic addresses specific needs of the decision makers of wound care facilities, a high growth segment within wound care. Program directors, medical directors, clinical managers, and other clinicians benefit from the interactive nature of feature articles, columns, regular departments and online exclusives, which address practice management options and perspectives affecting revenue, reimbursement, coding and much more.

WOUNDS is the most widely read, physician-focused journal in wound care.

The peer-reviewed research in WOUNDS addresses a wide range of clinical topics including tissue repair and regeneration, biology and biochemistry of wound healing, and clinical management of various wound etiologies. The journal’s multidisciplinary readership consists of dermatologists, general surgeons, plastic surgeons, vascular surgeons, internal medicine/family practitioners, podiatrists, researchers in industry and academia (PhDs), orthopedic surgeons, infectious disease physicians, and physician assistants. Whether dealing with a traumatic wound, a surgical or non-skin wound, a burn injury, or a diabetic foot ulcer, wound care professionals turn to WOUNDS for the latest in research and practice in this ever growing field of medicine.