Hard-to-heal wounds can compromise patient quality of life (QoL); thus, assessing QoL is an important aspect of wound management. The aim of this study, conducted from August 2015 to July 2016, was to translate a wound-specific instrument, the Wound-QoL, into the Swedish language and context and validate its ability to assess QoL in a population of patients with wounds of various etiologies. The Wound-QoL, derived from 3 existing wound care QoL instruments, is a paper-and-pencil tool comprised of 17 Likert-style questions addressing 3 categories (Body, Psyche, and Everyday Life) to provide a global score. The instrument was translated into Swedish and its psychometric properties (reliability, validity, responsiveness, and ceiling and floor effect) were tested in a convenience sample of 88 Swedish outpatients (64 men [73%], mean age 67 [range 27-96] years) with hard-to-heal wounds (mean duration 10 months) of varying etiologies. Participants completed the questionnaires at baseline in the beginning of the study and at 6 weeks; they also had the opportunity to comment on the questionnaire. Reliability was analyzed using Cronbach's alpha coefficient (0.70 or higher was considered acceptable). Criterion validity was examined using a generic European QoL instrument, considered the gold standard, as the comparator. Descriptive statistical analysis was performed for presentation of the demographic and wound variables. Standardized response mean was used to assess internal responsiveness. All tests were 2-sided with 95% confidence interval; the results were considered significant at P