Provide the Highest Level of Care to Your Chronic Wound Patients
As an in-home Health Care Agency, you want your staff to successfully care for your patients, but chronic wounds can prevent patients from getting the care they need. When you partner with Reneuvia, our specialists administer the chronic wound care necessary so your agency staff can focus on their comprehensive treatment or therapies.
Download our checklist on how to identify a chronic wound.
Chronic Wound Care Partner for Home Health Agencies
At Reneuvia, we work directly with Home Health Agencies, Long-Term Care Facilities, and Wound Clinics. We specialize in chronic ulcers and non-healing wounds caused by a variety of issues.
Our licensed providers take the time to listen to your concerns, truly understand what is happening, and provide appropriate care and education so you feel empowered and confident in the treatment of your patients’ chronic wounds.
Home health agencies receive the following benefits:
- Treatments are Medicare approved
- We file all necessary paperwork
- We bill the patient or Medicare directly
- We require no administrative needs
- Higher healing rates empowers your staff to be successful
- We assist in patient and staff education for wound care
Download our checklist on how to identify a chronic wound.
Home Health Agency FAQs
We will bill the patient’s insurance. Any remaining billing will be communicated with the patient directly. All administration of billing, payment, verification of coverage, prior authorizations, appointment scheduling or anything directly related to treatment of the wound will be performed by Reneuvia Wound Care.
Obviously, no two wounds are the same. However, a “basic” chronic wound is defined by a wound that has been present/and or treated for 3 months or more and still not fully healed. There are also different levels of chronic, non-healing wounds that involve pain, exudate, size, and other factors that our wound specialist will discuss with the patient when developing a treatment plan. You can download our chronic wound checklist that your home health nurse or aid can take with them to their patient’s next home health appointment to use to discuss if our mobile wound services would be in their best interest.
Submit the patient referral form along with the front and back of the patient’s primary (and secondary, if applicable) insurance card(s) along with chronic wound checklist (if completed) and any other pertinent information on the wound, including but not limited to, location, size, history, etc.
We are licensed to see patients in Missouri and Iowa.
A patient will receive the same type of clinic-level wound treatment as they would receive if they went to a wound clinic, with one exception. We are unable to provide hyperbaric wound treatment.
We are licensed and credentialed to practice mobile wound care in Missouri and Iowa. Our wound care specialist has over 20 years of experience treating patients.
Yes. Hyperbaric wound treatment.
Treatment time depends on the severity of the wound being treated. Usually, the first treatment visit is the longest and subsequent visits will become shorter as the wound healing progresses. The patient also plays a vital role in healing success by following the advice of the wound specialist to care for the wound between visits.
Yes. We accept Medicare in Iowa and Missouri. We also accept most commercial insurance plans. Before treatment begins, we will verify insurance coverage.
We can, if necessary. The wound care specialist will discuss a treatment plan with each patient. If a visit happens to fall on a holiday or weekend, then the patient and wound care specialist can discuss and decide to keep the appointment or modify the treatment date.
Yes. We will develop a treatment plan that works best for the patient and provider.
Not at this time. We are a 100% mobile wound care clinic.
Usually, once a week. The wound specialist will discuss a day and time each week that works best with the patient’s schedule. Typically, a treatment plan will consist of up to 12 weeks of treatment. The best results come from a treatment schedule that has our wound specialist treating the wound on the same day and time each week.
Not necessarily. However, if the patient has been seen by a doctor concerning the wound or it has been treated by a physician or wound clinic in the past, we need to know. Any medical history of wound treatment of the particular wound will assist in developing treatment plans and could be necessary to be covered by insurance.