Royal Wound Care is the nation’s leading provider of advanced wound care.

Royal Wound Care is a dedicated wound care center located in West Hills, California, specializing in advanced, comprehensive wound treatment. Founded by Dr. Moaddel, Royal Wound Care was born from his commitment to improve the way patients experience wound care. After witnessing the need for more compassionate, personalized care, Dr. Moaddel opened his own center to ensure that every patient receives the attention and expertise they deserve.

After witnessing the shortcomings in traditional wound care settings, Dr. Moaddel set out to create a better experience—one where patients receive the focused, attentive care they truly deserve. That vision became Royal Wound Care.

Royal Wound Care multidisciplinary medical team specializing in surgical wound healing, pressure injury management, and bedside wound care services.

Our Mission

To deliver exceptional, accessible wound care tailored to the individual—whether in our state of-the-art clinic, at a skilled nursing facility, or in the comfort of a patient’s home. We treat the wound, but we also care for the whole person.

Why Choose Royal Wound Care?

Ongoing Education & Certification

For staff, families, and partner facilities, including wound in-services and professional training opportunities

Royal Wound Care ongoing education and professional certification training for advanced wound care specialists, ensuring up-to-date clinical expertise and best practices in wound healing and patient care.

Expert-Led Care by Board-Certified Providers

With years of hands-on experience managing chronic and complex wounds

Royal Wound Care physician icon symbolizing expert bedside wound evaluations, pressure injury treatment, and surgical site management.

Advanced Modalities

Including negative pressure therapy, mist ultrasound, debridement, Doppler studies, grafts, and more

Royal Wound Care health and healing icon featuring a medical cross and heart, symbolizing compassionate wound care services.

Survey-Ready Documentation

That keeps facilities compliant and families informed

Royal Wound Care medical clipboard icon representing patient documentation and wound care progress tracking.

Truly Personalized Care Plans

Tailored to each patient’s condition, lifestyle, and healing goals

Royal Wound Care hospital facility icon representing skilled nursing facility partnerships and advanced wound care programs.

Mobile Services That Come to You

Care delivered at home, in clinics, or within partner facilities

Royal Wound Care bedside treatment icon with hospital bed, symbolizing personalized mobile wound care and post-acute services.
Royal Wound Care physician providing compassionate support to elderly patient, promoting advanced wound care solutions with modern technology.

A Team That Cares And The Results To Prove It

At Royal Wound Care, we deliver results that consistently outperform the national average. Our advanced healing process combines evidence-based treatments, personalized care plans, and direct physician oversight to ensure optimal outcomes. Unlike many clinics, every patient is managed by a board-certified wound care physician who evaluates their condition and customizes treatment from day one.

Our Stage 3 Sacral ulcer graph demonstrates how our approach leads to significantly faster healing compared to the national average. While traditional care results in gradual wound size reduction over several months, patients treated at Royal Wound Care experience more rapid progress through targeted therapies, aggressive infection control, and ongoing physician-directed adjustments to their care plan. Our proactive methods allow us to close even complex wounds weeks earlier than national trends, improving patient mobility, reducing pain, and preventing further complications.

Stage 4 sacral ulcers are among the most complex wounds to treat, yet our outcomes set us apart. Patients at Royal Wound Care heal twice as fast as the national average by leveraging advanced biologic grafts, comprehensive infection management, and customized care protocols. These results highlight our proactive, physician-led care model, allowing us to manage even the most challenging cases successfully while improving long-term patient outcomes.

What Our Partners Experience

86% lower infection rates

Royal Wound Care outcomes graphic highlighting 86% lower wound infection rates compared to industry averages, demonstrating superior infection control practices.

47% faster healing compared to others

Royal Wound Care performance metric icon showing 47% faster wound healing compared to standard wound care providers, ensuring quicker recovery for patients.

88% fewer wound-related rehospitalizations

Royal Wound Care achievement icon illustrating 88% fewer wound-related hospital readmissions, emphasizing effective bedside wound care and patient management.

58% faster pressure ulcer healing times

Royal Wound Care results icon showcasing 58% faster pressure injury healing times, delivering advanced treatment solutions for pressure ulcers and bedsores.

Ready to Heal with Royal Wound Care?

Skin Prep For Wound Care

Skin Prep for Wound Care: Best Practices for Proper Healing

February 05, 202613 min read

Skin Prep for Wound Care: Best Practices for Proper Healing

In wound care, there are many moving parts to ensure safe, optimal healing. Skin prep is a critical—and often overlooked—first step in the process. Before applying dressings, the periwound skin must be prepared to support cleaning, secure adhesion, and prevent infection. Skin prep is an important tool for this process.

Dressings and medical adhesives must stay in place to protect open wounds and manage wound drainage. Without preparation, patients may experience tape stripping and friction, discomfort during adhesive removal, or even skin injury. We recently discussed this in our guide, “How to Remove Gauze Stuck to a Wound.”

To maintain an optimal healing environment, understanding how to care for wounds is the first, most important step. Therefore, in this guide, we will discuss what skin prep is, why it matters for wound healing, and a step-by-step approach for application. We’ll also cover key safety considerations important for both clinical and home health care settings.

Skin Prep for Wound Care

Skin Prep for Wound Care: Best Practices for Proper Healing

Skin prep is far more important than simply helping wound dressings stick. It’s the process of reducing the microbial load, protecting the skin from irritation, and creating an optimal surface for dressing application—all factors crucial in proper healing.

Additionally, prioritizing skin prep can significantly improve how well dressings and medical devices adhere to the skin without causing trauma, tearing, or discomfort during changes. This is particularly important for complex wounds that require frequent removal.

In this post, you can find:

  • What skin prep is for wounds, and its role in healing

  • The differences between skin prep and wound cleansing

  • When you should use skin prep in wound management

  • A step-by-step guide for proper application

  • Common mistakes and best practices

  • How to integrate skin prep into home wound care management

At Royal Wound Care, we believe it’s helpful to know not only what steps to take in wound management, but why each one matters. That’s why this patient-focused resource is designed to be educational, supportive, and rooted in evidence-based practices.

What Is Skin Prep for Wounds?

Skin prep for wounds is a clinical method used to protect the skin surrounding a wound site. Think of it as a shield for the wound bed, protecting the injury against trauma, excessive moisture, bacteria, and friction. There are also many different types of skin prep products, including:

  • No-Sting Barrier Films: These alcohol-free, liquid-based formulas form a protective barrier over periwound skin. They’re breathable, transparent, and waterproof, protecting the area from friction and adhesive trauma.

  • Adhesive Preps and Barriers: Often in the form of sprays, wipes, or foams, these products are applied before adhesive application. It creates a gentle, tacky layer that helps medical devices and dressings stick securely while also shielding the wound.

  • Skin Protectants: These barrier agents are typically available as creams, liquid films, wipes, or sprays. A patient or caretaker will apply it to periwound skin to reduce moisture loss and protect injuries from adhesive stripping. They are often transparent and silicone-based, specialized for sensitive skin.

Many reputable companies, such as Smith & Nephew, formulate their products to be durable, breathable, protective, and long-lasting. However, skin prep should be used only on intact skin, not applied directly to open wound beds unless specifically directed otherwise by a clinician.

Related: Caring for Your Wound

What Does Skin Prep Do for Wounds

What Does Skin Prep Do for Wounds?

Skin prep offers many functional benefits when caring for wounds, including:

Removes Oils, Dirt, and Residue

Before applying skin prep, it’s crucial to cleanse, sterilize, and dry the area. Otherwise, bacteria, oil, dirt, and residue remain trapped underneath the dressing, increasing the risk of infection and slow healing.

After cleansing, skin prep forms a fast-drying, sterile barrier that prevents irritants from reaching the wound bed. Additionally, this process ensures that adhesive dressings bond securely to the injury site, fully protecting it.

Related: Avoiding Common Wound Care Mistakes

Protects Periwound Skin From Irritation and Trauma

When changing dressings, it’s not uncommon to experience irritation. However, whether due to frequent changes or improper application, adhesive removal can damage healthy skin and lead to skin tearing. When this happens, it significantly complicates the healing processes and increases the risk of infection.

Fortunately, skin prep helps protect healthy skin by creating a non-oily barrier film, ultimately maintaining skin integrity. Dressing removal becomes an easy, painless process that doesn’t result in cumulative damage.

Forms a Breathable, Waterproof Barrier

Recent research demonstrates that keeping wounds moist is essential for proper healing. However, they should never be excessively moist, as this increases the risk of maceration—a condition that causes skin damage due to overly soft tissue.

By providing a protective barrier, skin prep keeps necessary moisture within the dressing while keeping contaminants, such as sweat, ostomy effluent, or wound drainage out. Still, it remains breathable, allowing water vapor to pass through and avoiding maceration risk entirely.

Additionally, some products like SKIN-PREP® Protective Dressing are designed to be long-lasting, hypoallergenic, and flexible, prioritizing both efficiency and safety.

Improves Dressing Displacement

Many patients experience dressing displacement—especially those in long-term care or individuals navigating chronic wound management. When using skin prep, however, the tacky layer improves dressing attachment and enhances adhesion.

Additionally, it smooths out minor skin contours that may otherwise influence how a dressing remains on the surface. By ensuring that the dressing does not slip, move, or slide, patients can better reduce the risk of bacteria reaching the wound and negatively impacting healing.

Skin Prep vs. Wound Cleaning

Although wound care specialists will discuss these two processes together, skin prep and wound cleaning serve different purposes.

Skin prep targets intact periwound skin. This is the area surrounding the wound bed—the skin that the adhesives will directly touch. When clinicians discuss “skin prep,” they are referring to a specific product that forms a protective barrier over an injury. This essential tool reduces surface bacteria while helping dressings and medical devices adhere better.

Wound cleansing, on the other hand, is the process of removing debris inside the wound bed using gentle cleansers and antimicrobial ointments. When managing wounds at home, it’s important to note that clients should avoid using harsh antiseptics. Products such as hydrogen peroxide and alcohol can damage healthy tissue and slow wound closure.

Both steps are essential components of comprehensive care and long-term recovery.

Related: Wound Care at Home: A Nurse’s Step-by-Step Checklist

Step-by-Step Skin Prep for Wound Care

The team at Royal Wound Care believes that treatment should be personalized, compassionate, and accessible. Even though it may seem complex, skin prep is straightforward with the proper guidance and supplies.

Below is a simple, step-by-step guide for effective skin prep:

  • Step 1: Wash hands. Before touching the wound, wash your hands thoroughly. Doing so removes any germs and bacteria that you can easily transmit to the injury. Afterwards, apply latex gloves for additional protection.

  • Step 2: Clean and dry wound. Using mild soap and water or saline solution, gently cleanse the wound. The skin should feel cool or slightly warm. Afterwards, pat it dry with a sterile cotton cloth.

  • Step 3: Apply skin prep. Apply the skin prep evenly to intact skin surrounding the actual wound. Make sure you avoid applying it directly to the open wound unless directly advised by your physician. Doing so may compromise tissue integrity, damage delicate skin cells, and delay healing.

  • Step 4: Allow product to dry. Before applying the dressing, let the skin prep dry for at least 30 seconds. This ensures that the skin fully absorbs the product and creates a smooth base. Additionally, it’s essential for barrier integrity and proper dressing or device adhesion.

  • Step 5: Apply dressing or adhesive device. After 30 seconds, the skin prep should feel slightly tacky or sticky. This means you are doing everything correctly! Now, apply the dressing or adhesive device, smoothing the border to ensure it’s sealed properly.

  • Step 6: Reapply. Next time you remove the dressing or medical device, make sure you reapply skin prep as well. The product will not stay on the skin with proper cleansing.

Best Practices and Safety Tips

Patch test new skin-prep products before applying them to periwound skin.

Before applying skin prep products, make sure you patch-test them in a discreet but accessible area. This step is particularly important for individuals with sensitive skin. Doing so prevents adverse reactions—most commonly contact dermatitis, hives, rashes, or eczema flare-ups.

Test the product on clean, dry, and easily accessible skin—such as the area behind the ear, elbow, or forearm. Afterwards, monitor the area for 48–72 hours to ensure there are no adverse reactions. If you experience itching, dryness, irritation, or redness, remove the product and avoid applying it to periwound skin.

Avoid using strong alcohol or peroxide directly on wounds.

As we mentioned earlier, patients and caregivers should avoid using harsh antiseptics on wounds. Although once popular in wound healing, these cleansers are considered cytotoxic agents, substances that damage skin cells crucial to healing.

Unless your wound care specialist has directed otherwise, clean the wound with warm water and a gentle soap or saline solution.

Do not apply skin prep on open wound beds—only on intact periwound skin.

Skin-prep is specifically formulated for healthy, intact skin. Applying it to wound beds is highly discouraged and can be harmful both to the wound and the healing process. For example, patients who apply skin prep directly to a wound may experience tissue damage, irritation, and increased inflammation.

If skin prep does accidentally reach the wound bed, cleanse the area with saline solution immediately. If you need additional help, contact the team at Royal Wound Care. We’d be happy to treat or assist you through the process.

Use sterile techniques as appropriate to your setting and wound type.

Different types of wounds require different techniques necessary for healing. Treatment for minor lacerations, for example, will be much more straightforward than healing a tunneling wound. Because of this, it’s important to follow the appropriate sterilization methods for your wound type.

Chronic or complex wounds often use advanced wound treatments and frequent dressing changes. Diabetic foot ulcers, on the other hand, require careful offloading and specialized dressing management. Using improper methods may not effectively treat the wound, making healing more difficult.

Coordinate with clinicians for infected or complex wounds.

For those managing complex or infected wounds, we recommend contacting a certified wound care specialist. These professionals can successfully assess wound severity, recommend appropriate treatment options, and help prevent complications.

Additionally, the right team, like those at Royal Wound Care, will ensure you feel supported from diagnosis to resolution. Visit our page, “Board-Certified Wound Care,” to learn more about how physicians improve lives and reduce hospitalizations.

Skin Prep for Wounds

We briefly discussed different skin prep products for wounds earlier. However, this comprehensive section will provide additional information about what each product is ideal for:

Barrier Films and Sprays

Barrier films and sprays are ideal for protecting at-risk periwound areas and sensitive skin. By forming a protective, breathable, water-resistant barrier, this skin-prep product preserves skin integrity during healing. Additionally, it minimizes the risk of adhesive trauma during dressing changes or device removal.

Common uses of barrier films and sprays include:

  • Preventing medical adhesive-related skin injuries (MARSI)

  • Managing incontinence-associated dermatitis

  • Protecting the skin around a stoma from wound exudate

  • Reducing friction between high-risk, fragile, or sensitive skin

Prep Wipes/Pads

Prep wipes and pads are extremely convenient for quick application before putting on bandages, dressings, or medical devices. They form a waterproof, gentle barrier against periwound skin, are fast-drying, and adjust well to high-friction areas without peeling or cracking.

Common uses of prep wipes and pads include:

  • Securing tapes and dressings around a wound

  • Preventing irritation from catheter sites

  • Shielding skin from ostomy effluent

  • Preparing skin for Wound VAC Therapy (Negative Pressure Wound Therapy)

Alcohol-Free vs. Alcohol-Based Preps

Alcohol-based skin-prep products are generally ideal for situations where patients require a quick, high-level disinfection. Common examples include injections or blood draws. They’re fast-drying, leave no residue, and sanitize unbroken skin. Additionally, they’re highly effective for cleaning medical devices before application.

Alcohol-free prep wipes, in comparison, are gentle, non-irritating, and don’t sting fragile or broken skin. They often form a protective barrier on the skin, enhancing the adhesion of dressings and improving patient comfort. Many doctors will use alcohol-free skin-prep wipes to minimize pain, reduce irritation, and sterilize periwound skin.

Specialized Preps for Fragile or Pediatric Skin

Many skin-prep products prioritize no-sting, alcohol-free formulas for fragile, elderly, or pediatric skin. One of the most respected examples is Smith & Nephew’s NO-STING SKIN-PREP wipes and sprays, mentioned earlier.

They are pediatric tested, provide up to 96 hours of protection, and are both non-toxic and hypoallergenic. With a water-based polymer solution and a transparent barrier, it’s suitable for children as young as 1 month old.

When to Seek Professional Care

Managing a wound at home can often be complex, confusing, and difficult. This is particularly true when you’re unsure whether the wound is infected or is healing slowly. Consider seeking professional care if you’re dealing with:

  • Increased warmth, redness, or swelling

  • Foul odor

  • Unusual drainage of any kind

  • Fever or chills

  • Red streak extending from the wound

  • A wound that isn’t healing after 10 days

  • Wounds exceeding ¾ inch long or ½ inch deep

  • Animal bites or human bites

  • Punctures from rusty or dirty objects

A wound care specialist can effectively diagnose and treat these conditions, with proven outcomes and measurable impact. Waiting is not worth the risk of reducing your quality of life—or increasing your risk of chronic wounds.

Related: When to See a Wound Care Specialist: Signs It’s Time to Get Expert Help

Integrating Skin  Prep Into Home Wound Care Routines

Integrating Skin Prep Into Home Wound Care Routines

Keep supplies organized.

When managing a wound at home, keep all supplies organized and sanitary. This reduces confusion and minimizes the risk of applying unnecessary products, dressings, or treatments. Additionally, it ensures every supply necessary for wound healing is free of contaminants or bacteria.

Follow a consistent dressing change schedule.

Routine care is essential in reducing irritation and improving outcomes. Consult with a wound care specialist to learn more about dressing schedules based on your unique situation. Remember: keeping dressing on for too long can delay healing, promote bacterial growth, and cause tissue damage.

Prioritize skin protection during adhesive removal.

While seemingly unlikely, skin tears and adhesive trauma (MARSI) are incredibly common when changing dressings or medical devices. It’s increasingly common among elderly, fragile, or sensitive skin. Prioritizing skin prep, however, can significantly reduce additional damage by making removal both gentler and safer.

Monitor the periwound skin at every change.

When changing dressings, tape, and medical devices, continuously monitor the periwound skin. Doing so reduces the risk of wound enlargement, maceration, inflammation, or contact dermatitis. If these symptoms are present, early detection is crucial for proper treatment and infection prevention.

Skin prep for wound care is essential for faster healing, improved outcomes, and protecting the periwound environment throughout treatment.

Wound healing often seems like a complex, dynamic process. While different injuries require different procedures, one thing remains true: skin prep is key in facilitating safe, effective recovery. With proper techniques and evidence-based guidance, healing becomes more manageable, comfortable, and successful—both in clinical and home-care settings.

At Royal Wound Care, our team specializes in comprehensive, advanced wound treatment. With a commitment to improving care and making treatment more accessible, every patient can expect to receive the attention and expertise they deserve.

For SNFs and independent nurses, we encourage you to review our educational opportunities and professional partnerships. When partnering with Royal Wound Care, you can expect faster healing times, lower infection rates, and fewer wound-related hospitalizations. The future of patient satisfaction and quality of life begins here!



Skin Prep for Wound CareSkin Prep for Proper Wound Healing
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Royal Wound Care Editorial Team

The Royal Wound Care Editorial Team is a group of experienced clinicians, certified wound care specialists, and healthcare writers dedicated to educating and empowering patients through accurate, compassionate, and practical content. Our mission is to provide expert guidance on wound prevention, treatment, and recovery—so you can heal faster, safer, and with confidence. Every article is reviewed for medical accuracy and written with your well-being in mind.

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(818)–660–2977

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