Sheila Dhand treats a lot of people who might not step foot in a health clinic or hospital — until an emergency.
"People don't want to show just anybody their wound," Dhand says. "A lot of time when talking about wounds, we're talking about drug use. And those things are so taboo."
Dhand is a wound care nurse with Prevention Point, a nonprofit organization that provides addiction, health and harm reduction services in Philadelphia. Her job involves going out in a mobile-wound-care-van where she tends to skin and soft-tissue infections that often result from injecting drugs.
She, and others, worry such wounds
are on the rise
Wounds related to injection drug use are
often hidden
Some simple measures, such as
using clean supplies when injecting drugs
"They can lead to amputations, they can lead to death," Dhand says. "They can lead to long-term, really expensive hospitalizations. They can lead to a valve replacement in the heart. So these are serious complications that cause pain and suffering and are really expensive."
A
2015 study
Philadelphia, meanwhile,
has been reviewing
While the debate over that idea continues, Prevention Point's wound care van makes its rounds, bringing its exam table and bins filled with bandages, ointments, sterile water and alcohol wipes where they're needed.
And for Dhand, the act of treating urgent wounds goes beyond helping the literal infection heal. It represents a link to other services and addressing the deeper wounds of addiction. "That's a really important part of it. It's not like, wound care [and then] goodbye," she says. "We'll also talk about: Have you overdosed in the past? Do you have Narcan? Do you know how to use it? ... I mean, you're cleaning someone's body, wrapping them up, and bandaging them up. It's really caring."