Most wound care books assume you already have clear orders, a wound specialist following the case, and immediate access to providers. Home health nurses know that’s not reality. Home Health Wound Care Without Orders was written for the exact moment nurses are actually in the field — standing in a patient’s home, staring at a wound, with no wound care orders, incomplete referrals, and a provider who expects you to make a recommendation. This is not a textbook. This is a field manual. Instead of theory, this book gives you a step-by-step, nurse-driven wound assessment and decision-making algorithmdesigned specifically for home health practice. You’ll learn how to identify what you’re seeing, document it defensibly, determine what the wound needs right now , and confidently recommend a wound care regimen a provider can sign and approve. What makes this book different Most wound care resources: • Focus on inpatient or clinic settings • Assume specialist oversight • Teach products without teaching decision logic • Don’t address documentation, advocacy, or Medicare risk This book is different because it starts where home health nurses actually start: with no orders. Inside this field manual, you’ll find: • A no-orders wound assessment algorithm that walks you through safety screening, tissue type, moisture balance, exudate, odor, depth, undermining, periwound condition, infection risk, and probable wound classification • Clear guidance on how to document wound characteristics in a Medicare-defensible way • A practical framework for determining what the wound needs (protect, debride, absorb, hydrate, offload, compress, or escalate) • Bridge treatment guidance for common wound scenarios — what nurses can safely implement while awaiting orders • Real-world advice on making provider recommendations that are reasonable, defensible, and easy for MDs to approve • Coverage of the top 25 common wound types seen in home health, including complex and often-ignored scenarios such as malignant wounds, atypical diabetic wounds, lymphedema-related blisters, mixed-etiology ulcers, and high-risk surgical sites • Clear inclusion of compression strategies (Unna boots, Calazime, two-layer systems) with scope-appropriate guardrails • An advanced section on NPWT (wound VACs) — including difficult wound VAC scenarios, white vs black foam, eschar considerations, packing technique, bridging, seal optimization, and real-world troubleshooting • Appendices with commonly used wound care products, cleansers, and solutions that home health nurses actually encounter in the field Who this book is for • Home health RNs • Case managers and SOC nurses • Nurses covering wounds without specialist support • Nurses who are tired of being told “just wait for orders” • Nurses who want to protect their license while still doing the right thing for the patient Who this book is NOT for • Hospital-only wound teams • Academic or certification exam prep • Nurses looking for generic product lists without clinical reasoning This book exists because home health nurses are already making wound care decisions — whether anyone acknowledges it or not. This field manual finally gives you the structure, language, and confidence to do it safely, ethically, and defensibly.