- Christina Couch
September is Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) Awareness Month, and staff at Wound Care are participating in the Save a Leg, Save a Life (SALSAL) Foundation’s “white sock” challenge to help educate the Manchester community about PAD and have pledged to closely partner with other clinicians involved in the PAD care pathway to help ensure high-risk patients are properly diagnosed and treated before it is too late.
“PAD is largely under-recognized, and amputation rates associated with this disease remain unnecessarily high,” said Dr. Gregory Wilkens. “That’s why we at AdventHealth Medical Group Wound Care are proud to support the White Sock Campaign and join the other clinicians on the frontlines of care to advocate for accurate diagnosis and timely treatment of patients suffering from the side effects of PAD. We also encourage everyone to be proactive in their own leg health by knowing the risk factors, classic warning signs and to ask their doctor to check their feet for signs of PAD.”
Throughout September, the wound healing staff at AdventHealth Manchester will also spread the message of early PAD detection with one simple and visible tool: a white sock. The garment will be worn as a symbol of PAD and to create solidarity with the many patients who suffered from late-stage PAD and required an amputation due to delayed treatment.
Affecting more than 12 million Americans, PAD is a common, yet serious cardiovascular condition that occurs when arteries in the legs become narrowed or blocked by plaque build-up, reducing blood flow to the limbs. Left untreated, PAD can result in devastating consequences including amputation and early death. Patients with PAD are also at a greater risk of future heart attack and stroke. Despite its prevalence, PAD is historically difficult to diagnose and treat as symptoms are often ignored, masked or confused with the typical aches and pains of aging. As a result, nearly 50 percent of patients with late-stage PAD are left untreated each year, placing them at a greater risk for an amputation.
While treatment for PAD varies based on the severity of disease state, only a physician can determine the best option for a patient based on his or her individual needs. For more information about PAD and treatment options, call AdventHealth Medical Group Wound Care at AdventHealth Manchester at Call606-598-4524. No referral is required.
About AdventHealth Manchester
AdventHealth Manchester is a 49-bed acute care, not-for-profit Christian community hospital that serves Clay county and its surrounding areas. As a part of AdventHealth’s connected system of care, AdventHealth Manchester provides whole-person care for its community. With a sacred mission of Extending the Healing Ministry of Christ, AdventHealth is a connected system of care for every stage of life and health. More than 80,000 skilled and compassionate caregivers in physician practices, hospitals, outpatient clinics, skilled nursing facilities, home health agencies and hospice centers provide individualized, wholistic care. A shared vision, common values, focus on whole-person health and commitment to making communities healthier unify the system's nearly 50 hospital campuses and hundreds of care sites in diverse markets throughout almost a dozen states. For more information about AdventHealth, visit AdventHealth.com, or Facebook.com/AdventHealth.
Recent News
Stephanie shares her experience at AdventHealth Clinic Corbin.
Shortly after undergoing surgery at an East Florida AdventHealth facility, a man embarked on a trip to Tennessee to visit his girlfriend. During his stay, he noticed swelling at the site of his IV...
In her hometown of Manchester, Kentucky, Mary Ann Roberts found her calling as a home health administrator, spreading whole-person care to patients who feel like family.
AdventHealth Manchester, the only AdventHealth global mission site in the United States, recently hosted 45 high school students from Highlands Academy and Madison Academy for a two-day mission trip...
AdventHealth Manchester is partnering with Volunteers of America and other vendors to host a Health & Wellness Day on Thursday, April 27, 2023. The health fair will be at Eastern Kentucky University...
AdventHealth has been recognized by Becker’s Healthcare as a top place to work in health care. The 2023 list of 150 hospitals, health systems and health care companies is meant to call attention to...
AdventHealth Primary Care Clinic welcomes Andrew Vaughn, MD, to its team as our new otolaryngologist, or ear, nose, and throat.
For 262 residents in Kentucky’s Clay County, home for the holidays held new meaning as they, together with help from AdventHealth team members from the Manchester campus and elsewhere, spent much of...
AdventHealth Manchester’s Community Outreach and Marketing team hosted a Ladies Night Out Paint and Pamper Party on October 20, 2022, at our local EKU Manchester campus. Ladies enjoyed finger foods...
AdventHealth Manchester is proud to welcome Theresa Hall, RADPSS, to our behavioral health team. Hall comes to AdventHealth with over three years of experience in counseling. She received her degree...
AdventHealth Manchester Foundation (AHMF), along with community partners, hosted a golf scramble on October 14, 2022, at our local Big Hickory Golf Course. Golfers enjoyed a delicious lunch donated by...
Sissel Jacob, CEO of AdventHealth Manchester (AHM) presented four Clay County High School (CCHS) students with the Live Life Scholarship and Bert T. Combs Scholarship on May 17, 2022.