Pre-launch clinical notice: Palm Wound Care is open for general inquiries and launch partner conversations. Clinical services are not being provided until required approvals, staffing, privacy, and compliance safeguards are active. Do not submit PHI through public forms.

Diabetic Foot Ulcer Care

Diabetic Foot Ulcer Care in South Florida.

Diabetic foot ulcers often need consistent measurements, offloading coordination, vascular awareness, infection vigilance, and communication with podiatry, primary care, vascular, and home health teams.

Mobile support for diabetic foot ulcer care.

Palm Wound Care is being structured for Broward, Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach County patients and referral partners who need a clearer pathway for diabetic foot ulcer care across homes and post-acute settings.

The public website can start a general conversation. Clinical details, photos, patient identifiers, and treatment decisions must stay out of public forms.

Relevant needs

  • Diabetic foot wounds and plantar ulcers
  • Slow-healing foot or toe wounds
  • Offloading and dressing-plan coordination
  • Escalation when infection or vascular concerns appear

Safety first

Know when a wound should not wait.

New redness, spreading warmth, fever, odor, severe pain, black tissue, or rapidly worsening drainage should be treated as urgent medical concerns.

  • This page is educational only.
  • Call 911 or go to the ER for severe symptoms.
  • All clinical decisions require licensed clinician judgment.

Diabetic Foot Ulcer Care FAQs

What is the goal of diabetic foot ulcer care?
The goal is to support wound assessment, follow-up, documentation, communication, and escalation decisions through licensed clinician judgment when operations are active.
Can Palm Wound Care diagnose or treat through the website?
No. The website is for general information and inquiry only. It does not diagnose, treat, or provide medical advice.
When should a wound be urgent?
New redness, spreading warmth, fever, odor, severe pain, black tissue, or rapidly worsening drainage should be treated as urgent medical concerns.

Start the wound-care conversation.

For referrals, partnership conversations, patient or family questions, and career interest. Please do not include protected health information.

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