Modification and validation of the Bluebelle Wound Healing Questionnaire (WHQ) for assessing surgical site infection in wounds healing by secondary intention.

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All Authors

Macefield, R.
Mandefield, L.
Blazeby, JM.
Fairhurst, C.
Baird, K.
Arundel, C.
Chetter, I.
Martin, BC.
Hewitt, C.
Gkekas, A.

LTHT Author

Fletcher, J
Greenwood, Clare
Wallace, Tom

LTHT Department

Pathology
Clinical Immunology & Allergy
Tissue Viability
Trauma & Related Services
Vascular Surgery

Non Medic

Clinical Nurse Specialist

Publication Date

2025

Item Type

Journal Article

Language

Subject

Subject Headings

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Surgical wounds healing by secondary intention are common. Healing is often complicated by surgical site infection (SSI). SSI assessment is important to guide treatment but existing methods generally require in-person assessment, making them resource intensive. A validated patient-reported SSI outcome measure may be useful to overcome this limitation. AIM: To modify and validate the Bluebelle Wound Healing Questionnaire (WHQ) for wounds healing by secondary intention. METHODS: The 18-item Bluebelle WHQ developed for wounds healing by primary intention was modified to make it applicable to secondary healing wounds. Testing was performed as part of the SWHSI-2 randomised trial assessing negative pressure wound dressings versus standard care. Participants completed the WHQ at five timepoints; in-person (baseline, post-healing) and by post (3, 6, 12 months). A reference SSI assessment was performed by a research nurse at the time of wound healing. Acceptability and criterion validity (ability of the Bluebelle WHQ to discriminate between SSI/no SSI) were explored by examining questionnaire return rates, levels of missing data and total score sensitivity/specificity values (receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC)). RESULTS: Baseline in-person questionnaire return rates were highest (672/686; 98 %), with postal return rates of 428/615 (68.5 %), 274/416 (65.9 %) and 186/296 (62.8 %) at follow up points. Overall, low levels of item-missing data were observed with few problems completing the questionnaire reported. Ability to discriminate between SSI/no SSI was good (Area under ROC = 0.796). CONCLUSION: The modified Bluebelle WHQ is a valuable tool for post-discharge assessment of wounds healing by secondary intention. It is recommended for use in research and clinical practice.

Journal

Journal of Tissue Viability