Skilled Nursing vs. LTAC for Wound Care
When does a complex wound require a Long-Term Acute Care hospital vs. a skilled nursing facility? A guide for families navigating post-acute wound care in Texas.
Complex wounds — stage 3–4 pressure injuries, diabetic foot ulcers, post-surgical wounds, and necrotizing fasciitis recovery — require specialized care that falls along a spectrum from SNF-manageable to LTAC-only. Understanding where a wound falls on that spectrum helps families navigate confusing post-acute recommendations.
Most wound care belongs in SNF — but some needs LTAC
The majority of complex wound care — including stage 3 and even many stage 4 pressure injuries — can be effectively managed in a skilled nursing facility with a certified wound nurse. LTAC is appropriate when the patient has concurrent medical instability that requires daily physician-level management: sepsis from the wound, respiratory failure, or post-surgical wound dehiscence requiring repeated operative intervention. If the discharge planner is recommending LTAC, ask specifically what medical instability requires it, as LTAC costs are dramatically higher than SNF.
Questions Families Ask About This Decision
A Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurse (WOCN) is a registered nurse with specialized wound care certification. Not every SNF has a dedicated WOCN — ask specifically. Facilities without a dedicated wound nurse often have wound care consultants who visit weekly, which may be sufficient for stable wounds.
Yes. Wound care is one of the most common reasons for Medicare-covered SNF stays. Medicare Part A covers SNF care after a qualifying 3-day hospital stay, fully for days 1–20 and with a daily copay for days 21–100.
VAC therapy (negative pressure wound therapy) uses suction to promote wound healing. Most skilled nursing facilities can provide VAC therapy through wound care nurses or contracted services. It’s a standard SNF wound care tool, not an LTAC-only capability.
LTAC is indicated when the wound patient also has: respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation, active sepsis requiring IV vasopressors, daily surgical wound management, or other acute medical needs requiring physician oversight more than an SNF provides.
Related Comparisons
SNF vs. LTACInpatient Rehab vs. SNF RehabSNF vs. Home HealthAssisted Living vs. Skilled NursingNot Sure Which Is Right for Your Family?
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