6 Wounds International Vol 5 | Issue 2 | ©Wounds International 2014 | www.woundsinternational.com
Wound management
International Wound
Infection Institute:
Leaders in wound
infection understanding,
prevention, and
management
Wounds International's clinical innovations section presents recent
developments in wound care.
W
ound infection is a source
of morbidity and mortality
the world over; be it in
acute wounds, or the ever-growing
number of chronic wounds. Much
remains to be done by the clinicians
in the ield and researchers in the lab
to better understand and manage
wound infection. Though common, the
nuances of many of the key issues in
infection – bioilms, critical colonisation,
and so on – are poorly understood.
In 2006, scientists, medical and
nursing practitioners, allied healthcare
professionals and academics met
in Budapest to explore their shared
interest in wound infection, and to
discuss the possibility of forming
an expert body able to participate
in the expansion of understanding,
prevention, and best-practice management of wound
infections. The meeting was Chaired by Professor Keith
Harding, and made possible by an unrestricted education
grant from Smith & Nephew.
Of the back of the Budapest meeting, and 2 years later in
Toronto, the newly formed International Wound Infection
Institute (IWII; www.woundinfection-institute.com) held
its irst annual general meeting to establish a governance
structure and agree a framework for future activities. Keith
Harding was elected Chair and served until 2012, at which
time Terry Swanson took on the Chairmanship at the
annual general meeting held during the Australian Wound
Management National Conference.
WHAT IS THE IWII?
The IWII is a multidisciplinary inclusive society, providing
a global perspective on the latest developments in wound
infection. We aim to inform and educate specialist and
generalist practitioners in wound infection prevention
and management, and create a positive impact on patient
outcomes.
Membership of the IWII is free and available through
the website (www.woundinfection-institute.com). The IWII
currently has more than 1700 registered members from
more than 20 countries. We aim to build our international
membership and professional and commercial networks
for those interested in the prevention and management
of wound infection. We seek sustainable inancial support,
which will enable us to advance our research and
education goals and the development of best practice
documents for both the health professional and the
wounded.
If you are interested in wound infection or more
importantly preventing them then please consider
becoming a member the IWII. Members have access to
a wealth of material on the IWII website, with a focus on
the latest evidence, research, and education in wound
infection prevention and management. [Please note: the
IWII website is currently being re-designed so we apologise
for the lack of updates; our secretariat hopes that the
website will be fully functional by mid-year.]
Available resources include a curriculum outline on
wound infection, a comprehensive matrix of evidence, an
international consensus paper on infection and several
reviews and commentaries, including a monthly update on
the latest publications in the ield.
IWII OUTPUTS
The IWII has produced a number of widely recognised
and endorsed documents. Importantly, the IWII reviewed,
revised, and extended the 2004 TIME principles
[1]
in the
International Wound Journal.
[2]
A review was carried out of each of the core TIME
concepts: tissue (nonviable); infection/inlammation;
moisture balance; and edge/epithelial advancement, to
determine whether any signiicant changes had occurred
since the original publication. Where diferences were
identiied, they were investigated and the indings
included in the updated version of the framework. The
most important diferences were in four key areas:
News Wounds update
Clinical innovations
News Wounds update
Clinical update News Wounds update
Clinical innovations
Authors:
Terry Swanson
[top] and Keryln
Carville [bottom]