WoundCasters

Welcome to WoundCasters, a podcast from Wound Care Today USA, where we go beyond the basics of wound management. Hosted by Dr. Felix Boecker, each episode features in-depth conversations with leading clinicians, scientists, and innovators to uncover the science, technology, and best practices driving better wound outcomes. From cutting-edge products and clinical research to ethical challenges and real-world case insights, WoundCasters delivers fresh, practical knowledge for every wound care professional.

  1. 7 Jul

    Ep.25 Addressing the Communication Gap in Wound Care

    In this episode of WoundCasters, host Dr. Felix Boecker is joined by Sarah Check, a former wound care nurse turned marketing and copywriting specialist, to unpack a topic many clinicians quietly struggle with: how to communicate what they do in a way patients and referral partners actually understand. Drawing from her unique background on both the clinical and marketing sides, Sarah explains why excellent care alone is no longer enough—patients and providers have to be able to find you first. The conversation explores the most common marketing missteps wound care clinics make, from vague website messaging and unclear calls to action to failing to specify who they serve and where they’re located. Sarah breaks down why clinician-centric language often misses the mark with patients, how search engines and AI now surface healthcare content, and why clarity—not cleverness—is the single most important factor in digital visibility. Together, Felix and Sarah discuss practical improvements clinics can make without becoming “salesy,” including better patient education, compliant and authentic testimonials, referral-friendly site structure, and smarter use of SEO and AI-driven discovery. The episode also dives into the often-ignored middle of the marketing funnel: what happens after a patient or referring provider reaches out. Sarah explains why response time, follow-up, and simple process tracking can dramatically improve access to care and clinic growth—often more than paid ads ever will. This conversation reframes marketing not as promotion, but as patient navigation and service. For clinicians who want their expertise to reach the people who need it most, this episode offers a grounded, ethical, and immediately actionable roadmap.

  2. 23 Jun

    Ep.24 Why We're Underselling Surgical Closure

    In this episode of WoundCasters, Dr. Felix Boecker challenges one of the most entrenched habits in modern wound care: the reflexive reliance on prolonged conservative management when definitive surgical closure may be the faster, safer, and more humane option. Drawing from clinical experience and real patient stories, Felix explores why surgical solutions—such as delayed primary closure, skin grafts, and flaps—are too often treated as last resorts rather than early considerations. The result, he argues, is unnecessary patient suffering, prolonged healing timelines, and missed opportunities for faster recovery. Felix walks listeners through the cultural, systemic, and financial forces that quietly discourage surgical closure, including siloed care models, risk aversion, reimbursement incentives, and knowledge gaps among non-surgical wound care providers. He explains how being “good” at conservative management can actually blind clinicians to better options, and why steady but slow wound progress is not the same as optimal care. Through practical examples—diabetic foot ulcers, venous leg ulcers, pressure injuries, postoperative wound breakdowns, and traumatic wounds—he illustrates when surgical closure should be strongly considered and how earlier intervention can dramatically shorten healing time. The episode also serves as a practical guide for collaboration. Felix outlines how wound care providers can identify appropriate surgical candidates, optimize patients pre-operatively, communicate effectively with surgeons, and build long-term multidisciplinary partnerships that benefit patients. Ultimately, this conversation reframes surgical closure not as a failure of conservative care, but as a critical tool in comprehensive wound management. Why We’re Underselling Surgical Closure is a call to think surgically, advocate boldly, and prioritize definitive healing over habitual temporizing—always in service of the patient’s quality of life.

  3. 2 Jun

    Ep.23 The Current State of AI in Wound Care

    In this episode of WoundCasters, Dr. Felix Boecker takes a thoughtful, grounded look at the rapidly evolving role of artificial intelligence in skin and wound care. Moving beyond hype and headlines, Felix examines what AI actually is—and what it is not—through the lens of current clinical realities. Drawing from a recent article published in Advances in Skin and Wound Care and his own response to it, he frames AI not as a replacement for clinicians, but as a developing partner that has the potential to improve precision, consistency, and decision-making in wound care practice. Felix explores how AI is already being used today, including wound measurement, image recognition, healing trajectory tracking, early infection detection, symptom reporting, and treatment recommendations. He discusses both the promise and the limitations of these tools, emphasizing the importance of human oversight, real-world validation, and clinician involvement in development. AI, he argues, currently sits somewhere between a tool and a toy—but with proper engagement from wound care professionals, it can mature into a reliable clinical collaborator that reduces human error and enhances data-driven oversight. The episode also reinforces what AI can never replace: empathy, judgment, and the human connection at the heart of medicine. While algorithms can analyze data and flag concerns, they cannot comfort a patient, understand fear, or build trust. Felix concludes with a call to action for clinicians to actively shape how AI is designed, implemented, and ethically integrated into care. When technology and compassion work together, he argues, the future of wound care becomes not just more efficient—but more human.

  4. 28 Apr

    Ep.21 Run to the Sound of the Guns

    In this episode of WoundCasters, Felix Boecker explores the Navy SEAL principle “Run to the sound of the guns” and why it offers a powerful framework for leadership in chronic wound care. Borrowed from the battlefield, the phrase doesn’t imply chaos or aggression—it represents a mindset of moving toward the most difficult, complex, and high-risk situations rather than avoiding them. In the clinic, that “gunfire” is often the most challenging wounds, patients, and systems of care that others may hesitate to take on. Felix applies this principle to real-world wound care scenarios, from complex diabetic foot ulcers with suspected osteomyelitis to massive stage IV pressure injuries and non-healing wounds complicated by multiple comorbidities. Rather than settling for superficial or passive treatment, this mindset demands decisive, comprehensive action—deep debridement, appropriate imaging, multidisciplinary collaboration, and ownership of the entire care plan. True wound care leadership means becoming the quarterback of the team, addressing not just the wound surface, but the systemic barriers preventing healing. The episode also expands beyond clinical complexity to include difficult patient interactions, administrative obstacles, and professional disagreements. Felix explains how running toward these challenges—whether advocating through insurance denials, navigating referral breakdowns, or having uncomfortable conversations with other providers—ultimately protects patients and strengthens outcomes. Run to the Sound of the Guns is a call to purpose, courage, and commitment, reminding clinicians that the most meaningful victories in wound care come from embracing the hard cases and standing firmly in advocacy for those who need it most.

  5. 31 Mar

    Ep.19 The Only Easy Day Was Yesterday

    In this episode of WoundCasters, Dr. Felix Boecker explores the Navy SEAL mantra “The only easy day was yesterday” and why it resonates so deeply with the realities of chronic wound care. Drawing inspiration from Admiral William McRaven’s The Wisdom of the Bullfrog, Felix reframes the phrase not as a complaint, but as a mindset—one rooted in readiness, perseverance, and an acceptance that today’s work will demand fresh energy, focus, and resolve. Felix connects this principle to everyday clinical practice, where progress is rarely linear and yesterday’s success offers no guarantee for today’s outcomes. A wound that appeared to be healing can stall or worsen without warning, requiring clinicians to reassess, adapt, and problem-solve rather than rely on past protocols. Even success brings new responsibilities, as wound closure marks the beginning of prevention, education, and long-term patient support. The episode emphasizes how this mindset transforms setbacks into missions and keeps clinicians engaged, curious, and resilient. The conversation also expands into leadership and patient advocacy. Felix explains how leaders must resist complacency after strong performance and instead foster continuous improvement within their teams. For patients, this mindset fuels relentless advocacy—whether appealing insurance denials, coordinating care across specialties, or pushing for what patients need when it’s inconvenient or difficult. The Only Easy Day Was Yesterday is presented as a philosophy of forward motion, reminding wound care professionals that the work is hard by nature—but meaningful precisely because of it.

About

Welcome to WoundCasters, a podcast from Wound Care Today USA, where we go beyond the basics of wound management. Hosted by Dr. Felix Boecker, each episode features in-depth conversations with leading clinicians, scientists, and innovators to uncover the science, technology, and best practices driving better wound outcomes. From cutting-edge products and clinical research to ethical challenges and real-world case insights, WoundCasters delivers fresh, practical knowledge for every wound care professional.

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