WoundVision

The Industry’s First and Only Full-Service Wound Imaging and Documentation Solution

See The Difference.

Wound Imaging and Documentation Solutions

Clinical Evidence

Ready to learn more? Request access to our clinical library for peer-reviewed studies, poster presentations, case studies, white papers and more.

Our Solutions

As the industry’s only full-service wound imaging and documentation provider, WoundVision offers a full suite of solutions to standardize wound assessment, reduce documentation errors, and streamline EMR workflows.

Physiological Documentation

Objective and quantitative measurement of skin temperature change

Easy and Accurate Measurement

Eliminate paper rulers and their inaccuracies - 96% Accurate vs. Paper Ruler

HIPAA-Compliant

WoundVision's Scout software meets the end-to-end requirements of HIPAA and HITECH

Scalable Standardization

Standardize photography, measurement, and assessment across a single facility or across the continuum of care

EMR Integration

Reduce documentation errors and fulfill minimum requirements with seamless integration into existing EMR workflows

Patient Satisfaction

Engage patients in the care plan with actionable and insightful data to increase compliance and overall satisfaction

HAPI Incidence Cost Calculator

Are hospital-acquired pressure injuries (HAPIs) impacting your patients and your bottom-line?

Use the calculator to estimate the current burden of HAPIs on your hospital as well as the clinical and financial impact that can be achieved by reducing HAPIs.

Free Educational Resource from the NPIAP:

Deep Tissue Pressure Injury or Imposter?

It’s critical for clinicians to make a clear distinction between Deep Tissue Pressure Injury and the Imposters since many conditions can lead to purple or ecchymotic skin and rapidly developing eschar.

WoundVision is proud to sponsor this free resource from the National Pressure Injury Advisory Panel (NPIAP) that aims to promote education and spread awareness on one of the most serious forms of pressure injury.