New York City + Westchester + Long Island
Wound care, limb preservation, and primary care that comes to you.
NYC Wound Bridge brings clinician house calls to the bedside, at home, in assisted living, and in skilled nursing across the five boroughs, Westchester, Nassau, and Suffolk. Wound care and home-based primary care from one team. No one has to travel to be seen, and your family doesn't have to figure this out alone.
Call 877-48-WOUND or email care@nycwoundbridge.org
For urgent or life-threatening symptoms, call 911.
Getting started
Reach out once. We'll take it from here.
Whether you're looking after a parent, a spouse, or a patient, there's one simple way to start, and a real person follows up. Choose the path that fits and we'll handle the rest.
For loved ones and caregivers
We'll come take a look.
A short note about your loved one and where they are is all it takes. No medical terms, no records, no wrong way to ask.
- A little about what's going on
- Where your loved one is staying
- The best way to reach you
For physicians, facilities, and care teams
Send a referral.
For discharge planners, social workers, home health teams, facilities, physicians, and clinicians who need wound care or home-based primary care follow-up reviewed quickly and clearly.
- Referring organization and direct contact
- Care setting, urgency, and clinical concern
- Follow-up communication after review
What we treat
One team for the wound and everything around it.
A wound that will not close is rarely only a wound. Circulation, diabetes, nutrition, medications, and mobility all decide whether skin heals. Our care covers the whole picture, not just the dressing.
Wound care at the bedside
Pressure injuries, diabetic foot ulcers, venous and arterial wounds, surgical wounds, and skin tears, with dressing plans caregivers can actually follow.
Wound careLimb preservation
Structured care for foot and leg wounds that put the limb at risk, with close monitoring and early escalation to podiatry and vascular partners.
Limb preservationDiabetes & insulin management
Glucose monitoring, insulin adjustment, and medication management, coordinated with wound healing when both are in play.
Primary & total careWeight & nutrition support
Practical plans built around what the person can actually do at home, including medication support where clinically appropriate.
Primary & total careBlood pressure & heart health
The circulation side of healing, managed in the same visit pattern as everything else.
Primary & total careCare after the hospital
Post-discharge follow-up so the plan made in the hospital survives the trip home.
Post-discharge careCommon questions
A few quick answers.
Families and caregivers
Do you really come to us?
Yes. Visits happen where the person already is: private homes and apartments, assisted living, memory care, skilled nursing, and rehab settings.
Do I need a referral to ask for help?
No. Anyone can call 877-48-WOUND or send a note. If a physician's order is needed for care, we help coordinate it.
What should I have ready when I call?
Just the short version: what's going on, where your loved one is staying, and how to reach you. We'll ask about the rest.
The care itself
What does a wound visit include?
Assessment and measurement, debridement when clinically appropriate, infection surveillance, and a dressing plan written for the people doing daily care.
Can you manage diabetes and the wound together?
Yes, and that's the point. Glucose control decides healing, so one team manages both in the same visit pattern.
What if the wound needs a specialist?
We escalate early to podiatry, vascular, and surgical partners, and we say so plainly when a wound needs more than bedside care.
Getting started
How fast will someone respond?
A real person follows up on every call and note. Timing depends on hours and volume, and urgent concerns should always go to 911 first.
Where do you visit?
The five boroughs, Westchester, Nassau, and Suffolk. Near an edge? Check the coverage page or just ask.
Is what I send private?
Information you share by phone or email goes to the clinical and administrative team and is used to follow up with you. See the privacy notice.
Guides
Plain answers for people doing the caring.
Discharged with a wound?
The first 72 hours at home, and what to check before the paperwork goes in a drawer.
Read the guideWhy won't this wound heal?
The five reasons wounds stall, and why the next dressing isn't the answer.
Read the guideThe weekly diabetic foot check
Five minutes a week against the worst outcome in diabetes.
Read the guideContact
care@nycwoundbridge.org877-48-WOUND · (877) 489-6863
Email the details, or call and talk it through. A real person follows up either way.