CWCN Exam Preparation

CWCN Preparation and Resources

The Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nursing Certification Board (WOCNCB) provides a list of recommended references that may assist candidates in preparing for the Certified Wound Care Nurse (CWCN) exam. These resources, which include key textbooks and guidelines on wound care, offer valuable insights into the field.

BoardCerts integrates these recommended resources and the CWCN exam blueprint into the development of the question banks, ensuring they are accurate, relevant, and aligned with the essential competencies of wound care nursing certification.

Key Concepts on CWCN Exam

Exam Categories: Percentage Distribution

CWCN Blueprint and Focus Areas

Area of FocusSubtopicsNumber of QuestionsPercent of Exam

Assessment

  • Assess comprehensive factors affecting wounds
  • Psychosocial factors affecting care (e.g., patient and caregiver ability to learn and perform care, economic implications, education, mental status, family dynamics, cultural beliefs)
  • Factors affecting wound healing (e.g., nutrition, comorbidities, medications, age, pain, mobility)
  • Skill in identifying need for diagnostic studies (e.g., biopsy, blood values, imaging, vascular, toe-brachial index, ankle-brachial index, duplex scanning)
  • Obtain patient health history through interviews, established medical records, and questionnaires to determine the patient’s current health and risk status
  • Interview processes
  • Basic diagnostic test results (e.g., lab values, imaging studies, vascular studies, wound cultures)
  • Performing initial assessment (e.g., history and presentation, comorbidities, cultural diversity, age, medications, psychological issues)
  • Interpreting nutritional status (e.g., lab values, diet history, BMI, appearance)
  • Interpreting pain using verbal and nonverbal tools
  • Perform focused assessments to determine current skin status and wound etiology (pressure, venous, arterial, neuropathic, other)
  • Dermatological etiology (e.g., contact dermatitis, fungal infection, herpetic lesions)
  • Wound etiology (e.g., pressure, lower extremity arterial disease, lower extremity venous disease, neuropathic, trauma, surgical, atypical, burns)
  • Skin and wound classification systems (e.g., pressure injury stages, medical adhesive-related skin injury, moisture-associated skin damage, skin tears, Wagner)
  • Periwound characteristics (e.g., induration, temperature, fluctuation, denudation, maceration, cellulitis)
  • Wound characteristics (e.g., tissue type, dimensions, location, exudate, odor, wound edges, color, epibole)
  • Phases of wound healing (e.g., hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, maturation)
  • Characteristics of healing wounds (e.g., granulation, decreased dimensions, resurfacing)
  • Characteristics of non-healing wounds (e.g., infection, biofilm, closed edge)
  • Indications and side effects of medications affecting wound healing
  • Skill in utilizing risk assessment tools (e.g., Braden Scale, Braden Q Scale, Norton Plus Scale)
  • Lower extremity assessment (e.g., quality of pulses, capillary refill, appearance of skin, elevational pallor, hair and nails, edema, protective sensation, proprioception)
  • Identifying the need for wound culture and choosing the most appropriate method

26

23.5%

Intervention

  • Recommend and/or provide appropriate interventions to promote optimal wound management
  • Principles of wound care (e.g., filling of dead space, moisture balance, periwound skin protection)
  • Wound bed preparation (e.g., debridement, infection management, moisture management, wound edge optimization)
  • Determining interventions to manage wounds (e.g., adjunctive modalities, offloading, support surfaces, protective footwear, tight glucose control, total contact casting)
  • Types, indications, and contraindications of debridement (e.g., biologic, autolytic, chemical, mechanical, surgical, conservative sharp, excisional)
  • Recommending appropriate pain management modalities
  • Obtaining wound cultures (e.g., aspirate, Levine, punch biopsy)
  • Recommending and/or performing appropriate studies (e.g., biopsy, laboratory, radiography, toe-brachial index, ankle-brachial index, transcutaneous oxygen pressure, duplex scanning)
  • Implement prevention measures to promote optimal skin health and prevent injury
  • Preventive measures based on risk assessment (e.g., moisture management, pressure redistribution, offloading, friction and shear management, nutrition)
  • Types of support surfaces
  • Implementing interventions based on risk assessment (e.g., moisture management, pressure redistribution, nutrition, cognition, mobility, offloading)
  • Utilizing appropriate skin care products
  • Preventing complications of wound healing (e.g., infection, maceration, inappropriate product use)
  • Selecting support surfaces

18

16.6%

Treatment

  • Recommend and/or perform wound bed preparation
  • Recommending appropriate wound cleansing regimen
  • Wound bed preparation (e.g., infection management, moisture management, wound edge optimization)
  • Recommend and/or perform debridement to promote wound healing
  • Types of debridement (e.g., biologic, autolytic, chemical, mechanical, surgical, conservative sharp, excisional)
  • Identifying indications and contraindications for debridement
  • Identifying wounds that require chemical cauterization
  • Selecting appropriate debridement modalities
  • Recommending appropriate topical treatment to maintain periwound integrity
  • Selecting and applying topical therapies for moist wound healing (e.g., containment of drainage, eliminate dead space, reduce bioburden, control odor)
  • Knowledge and application of advanced/adjunctive therapies to promote wound healing
  • Types, indications, and contraindications for compression therapy
  • Types of advanced modalities for treatment (e.g., leech therapy, bioengineered tissue, negative pressure wound therapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy)
  • Types of adjunctive modalities (e.g., hydrotherapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, pulsed lavage, mist therapy, maggot therapy)
  • Recommending compression therapy to manage edema (e.g., dynamic and static compression therapy)
  • Applying compression therapy (e.g., dynamic and static compression therapy)
  • Recommending and/or performing advanced wound therapies (e.g., leech therapy, bioengineered tissue, negative pressure wound therapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy)
  • Recommending and/or performing adjunctive modalities (e.g., hydrotherapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, pulsed lavage, mist therapy, maggot therapy)
  • Recommending and/or performing total contact casting

32

29.5%

Care Planning

  • Develop a patient-centered plan of care using health history and assessments to establish skin and wound management goals
  • Principles of patient-centered care (e.g., psychosocial issues, access to care, cultural beliefs)
  • Identifying and supporting patient and caregiver goals (e.g., preventive, palliative, maintenance, curative)
  • Setting patient-focused goals (e.g., preventive, palliative, maintenance, curative)
  • Evaluate the patient-centered plan of care using periodic assessments to promote optimal skin and wound management
  • Evaluating the effectiveness of the current treatment plan
  • Interpreting patient responses to interventions
  • Modifying interventions based on revised patient needs and goals

13

11.8%

Education and Referral

  • Educate patients and caregivers by using the individualized skin and wound care plan to prevent complications, maintain optimal skin and wound health, and encourage patient autonomy
  • Educate patients and caregivers on wound management and prevention
  • Education based on health literacy and patient/caregiver goals
  • Factors affecting wound management (e.g., infection control, nutrition, moisture management, repositioning, tobacco cessation, glycemic control, compliance)
  • Available resources (e.g., support and advocacy, supply access, post-acute care)
  • Educating the patient and family on procedures, rationale, and significance of diagnostic test results
  • Educating the patient and caregivers on wound care procedures and skin care
  • Educating patients and caregivers about modifiable risk factors (e.g., tobacco cessation, exercise, safety awareness, diet, offloading)
  • Recommending non-invasive and invasive interventions (e.g., pharmacological, walking program, surgical)
  • Educate healthcare professionals on skin and wound care management
  • Factors affecting wound management (e.g., infection control, nutrition, moisture management, repositioning, tobacco cessation, glycemic control, compliance, trauma avoidance)
  • Educating healthcare clinicians and providers on skin and wound care principles, procedures, and treatment goals
  • Facilitate multidisciplinary care collaboration and referrals
  • Available resources (e.g., support and advocacy, supply access, post-acute care)
  • Referrals for other services (e.g., rehabilitation, nutrition, diabetic education, social services, mental health)
  • Referral for appropriate studies (e.g., biopsy, laboratory, radiography, toe-brachial index [TBI], ankle-brachial index [ABI], transcutaneous oxygen pressure [TcPO2], duplex scanning)
  • Facilitating appropriate consultations (e.g., surgery, infectious disease, dermatology, podiatry)
  • Providing handoff communication

21

18.6%

CWCN Resources

The BoardCerts CWCN question bank is expertly crafted to align with the official exam blueprint, helping each individual concentrate on the most relevant topics for success.

In addition, WOCNCB lists the following resources as additional possible material to support preparation:

  • Acute & Chronic Wounds: Current Management Concepts, Elsevier Mosby.
  • WOCN Core Curriculum: Wound Management, Wolters Kluwer.
  • Wound Care: A Collaborative Practice Manual for Health Professionals, Lippincott.
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