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Wound Care Guide Β· Michigan

5 Signs a Wound
Is Not Healing Properly

When to recognize that a wound needs professional clinical intervention β€” and how Superior Wound Specialists delivers advanced wound care at home across Metro Detroit.

πŸ“ž Have a wound that concerns you? Superior Home Health of Michigan provides free in-home evaluations across Metro Detroit. Our nurse practitioner-led team specializes in complex wound care.

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Medically ReviewedRob Devore, FNP-BC Β· Family Nurse Practitioner Β· Superior Home Health of Michigan

Quick Answer

What are signs a wound is not healing properly?

The five key signs a wound is not healing properly are: no measurable improvement after 2-4 weeks of treatment, increasing or persistent signs of infection, wound size that is growing rather than shrinking, tissue that is becoming darker or discolored rather than pink and healthy, and excessive or changing drainage. Any of these signs warrants prompt professional clinical evaluation β€” particularly for diabetic patients and seniors.

Most wounds follow a predictable healing trajectory β€” inflammation, tissue formation, and remodeling. But for many patients across Metro Detroit, wounds stall somewhere in this process and fail to heal despite basic care. Recognizing these signs early and seeking professional intervention is critical. Superior Home Health of Michigan, through Superior Wound Specialists, provides advanced clinical wound care at home across Livonia, Novi, Farmington Hills, and Wayne County for exactly these situations.

Sign 1: No Measurable Improvement After 2-4 Weeks

A wound that shows no measurable reduction in size, depth, or area after 2-4 weeks of appropriate treatment is clinically considered a non-healing wound. This is the most important threshold to track. Progress does not have to be dramatic β€” but there should be a clear trajectory of improvement. If a wound looks the same or worse after a month of care, it needs professional re-evaluation and likely a different clinical approach. See our detailed guide on advanced wound care at home in Michigan for what escalation looks like.

Sign 2: Increasing or Persistent Infection Signs

Infection is the most dangerous complication of a non-healing wound. Warning signs include increasing redness spreading beyond the wound edges, warmth, swelling, yellow or green drainage, foul odor, and fever. In diabetic patients with neuropathy, these signs may occur without significant pain β€” making visual inspection essential. Any sign of spreading infection requires immediate clinical attention. Learn more about diabetic wound complications that families should watch for.

Sign 3: Wound Size Is Growing

A properly healing wound should gradually shrink in size. A wound that is growing β€” expanding in diameter, deepening, or developing satellite areas of breakdown β€” is a serious warning sign. This may indicate uncontrolled infection, inadequate pressure relief for pressure injuries, continued trauma to the wound site, or underlying vascular insufficiency preventing healing.

Sign 4: Tissue Color Is Concerning

Healthy healing tissue is pink-red, moist, and granular. Warning signs in wound tissue color include: yellow or green slough (dead tissue) covering the wound bed, black or brown eschar (necrotic tissue) forming at wound edges or center, pale or gray tissue indicating poor perfusion, and wound edges that are rolled or callused rather than flat and migrating inward.

Contact a Clinical Professional Immediately For:

Sign 5: Drainage Is Increasing or Changing

Some drainage from a wound is normal β€” clear or light pink fluid is expected. But increasing drainage volume, drainage that becomes thick, yellow, green, or brown, and drainage with a foul smell are signs of infection or wound breakdown. Changes in drainage character often precede visible changes in wound appearance, making it one of the earliest warning signs families can monitor at home.

What to Do If You See These Signs

If a wound shows any of the five signs above, professional clinical evaluation is needed β€” not a wait-and-see approach. Superior Wound Specialists, a division of Superior Home Health of Michigan, provides free in-home wound assessments across Metro Detroit. We evaluate the wound, determine the appropriate clinical approach, and begin treatment β€” including advanced wound graft therapy when indicated.

Visit Superior Wound Specialists β†’

Advanced Wound Care When Standard Care Isn't Working

When a wound fails to heal despite appropriate standard care, advanced interventions may be needed. Wound graft therapy β€” including DDHAM amniotic membrane grafts β€” can restart the healing process in wounds that have stalled. Skilled nursing oversight ensures the wound is being managed correctly at every stage. And Medicare may cover advanced wound care for eligible patients across Livonia, Novi, Farmington Hills, and Wayne County.

Superior Home Health of Michigan provides advanced wound care, skilled nursing, and post-hospital recovery services throughout Metro Detroit. Superior Wound Specialists is the specialized wound care division of Superior Home Health of Michigan β€” built specifically for the complex wounds that standard home health agencies cannot manage.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a wound take to heal?

Simple superficial wounds may heal in 1-2 weeks. Post-surgical wounds typically heal in 2-4 weeks. Diabetic foot ulcers can take 6-12+ weeks. Any wound showing no improvement after 4 weeks of appropriate treatment should be evaluated for advanced intervention.

What does a non-healing wound look like?

A non-healing wound may have yellow or green slough covering the wound bed, dark or blackening tissue at the edges, increasing drainage, persistent redness and swelling, rolled or callused wound edges, or no measurable reduction in size after weeks of care.

When should I call a doctor about a wound?

Call a healthcare provider promptly if you notice: signs of infection, a wound not improving after 2-4 weeks, darkening tissue, increasing pain, fever, or rapidly enlarging wound area. For diabetic patients, any non-healing wound warrants same-week clinical evaluation.

Can a non-healing wound be treated at home?

Yes. Superior Wound Specialists provides advanced clinical wound care β€” including wound graft therapy β€” at home across Metro Detroit. Many non-healing wounds can be successfully managed without facility visits through skilled nursing and advanced wound therapies.

Does Medicare cover treatment for non-healing wounds?

Medicare may cover skilled nursing visits and advanced wound therapies for non-healing wounds when medically necessary and ordered by a physician. Contact Superior Home Health of Michigan for a free coverage consultation.

Related Resources

⭐ Why Families Choose Superior Home Health of Michigan

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Nurse Practitioner-LedRob Devore, FNP-BC and Jaafer Beydoun, AGACNP-BC oversee every care plan.

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Advanced Wound CapabilitiesDDHAM graft therapy through Superior Wound Specialists.

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Medicare CertifiedCoverage consultation available at no cost.

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Metro Detroit CoverageLivonia, Novi, Farmington Hills, Canton, Dearborn & beyond.

Request a Free Wound Care Evaluation

Superior Home Health of Michigan provides advanced wound care across Livonia, Novi, Farmington Hills, Canton, and all of Metro Detroit. Free evaluations available β€” no obligation.

Related Pages

Advanced Wound Care Michigan Wound Care at Home Wound Care Guide Diabetic Home Care Medicare Wound Care Skilled Nursing Home Care Livonia Home Care Novi Medicare Coverage Home Care Costs Michigan All Resources Superior Wound Specialists