Chronic Wounds- Epidemiology - 2028 (G8) report delivers an in-depth understanding of the disease, historical, and forecasted epidemiology of Chronic Wounds in the United States, EU5 (Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom), Japan, and China.
Geography Covered
Study Period: 2017-2028
Chronic Wounds - Disease Understanding and Treatment Algorithm
Chronic wounds are wounds in which the normal process of healing has been disrupted at one or more points in the phases of hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. In this wound type, there is usually an underlying pathology, which produces a delay in the healing process. Common skin injuries and delays or poor healing of wounds do not always turn into chronic wounds. Therefore, diagnosis depends on patient history, which involves various risk factors, like diabetes, a weak immune system, or circulation problems. The wound can be assessed by its depth and size, color, smell, and the severity of pain and itching.
Chronic wounds are mainly caused by conditions that slow or stop the healing process, such as poor blood supply or low oxygen, an infection, weak immune system, swelling in the tissues around the wound. These are mainly classified as vascular ulcers (e.g., venous and arterial ulcers), diabetic ulcers, and pressure ulcers. Some common features shared by each of these wounds include prolonged or excessive inflammation, persistent infections, the formation of drug-resistant microbial biofilms, and the inability of dermal and/or epidermal cells to respond to reparative stimuli. In aggregate, these pathophysiologic phenomena result in the failure of these wounds to heal.
The publisher's chronic wounds market report gives a thorough understanding of the chronic wounds by including details, such as disease definition, classification, symptoms, etiology, pathophysiology, diagnostic trends.
Chronic Wounds - Epidemiology
The chronic wounds epidemiology division provides insights about historical and current patient pool and forecasted trends for every eight major countries. It helps to recognize the causes of current and forecasted trends by exploring numerous studies and views of key opinion leaders (KOL). This part of the the publisher's report also provides the diagnosed patient pool and their trends along with undertaken assumptions.
The disease epidemiology covered in the report provides historical as well as forecasted epidemiology [segmented by Total Incident Population of Chronic Wound in the G8 Countries, and Type-Specific Incidence of Chronic Wounds in the G8] scenario of chronic wounds in the G8 Countries covering United States, EU5 countries (Germany, Spain, Italy, France, and United Kingdom), Japan, and China from 2017 to 2028.
As per the publisher's analysis, the total Incident Population of Chronic Wounds in the G8 countries was found to be 26,621,142 in 2017 and expected to increase during the forecast period of 2017-2028. The estimates show the incidence was higher in China followed by the United States and among the European 5 countries, Germany had the highest incident population of chronic wounds followed by France and Italy.
On the other hand, Spain had the lowest incident population of chronic wounds. Another estimate of the publisher's analysis based on the type of Chronic Wounds showed that Diabetic Foot Ulcers accounted for the highest patient pool in the G8 countries, while Pressure Ulcers and Venous Ulcers cases account for nearly one-fourth, each, of the total chronic wounds population.
Report Scope
Chronic Wounds Report Key Strengths
Chronic Wounds Report Assessment
Geography Covered
- The United States
- EU5 (Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom)
- Japan
- China
Study Period: 2017-2028
Chronic Wounds - Disease Understanding and Treatment Algorithm
Chronic wounds are wounds in which the normal process of healing has been disrupted at one or more points in the phases of hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. In this wound type, there is usually an underlying pathology, which produces a delay in the healing process. Common skin injuries and delays or poor healing of wounds do not always turn into chronic wounds. Therefore, diagnosis depends on patient history, which involves various risk factors, like diabetes, a weak immune system, or circulation problems. The wound can be assessed by its depth and size, color, smell, and the severity of pain and itching.
Chronic wounds are mainly caused by conditions that slow or stop the healing process, such as poor blood supply or low oxygen, an infection, weak immune system, swelling in the tissues around the wound. These are mainly classified as vascular ulcers (e.g., venous and arterial ulcers), diabetic ulcers, and pressure ulcers. Some common features shared by each of these wounds include prolonged or excessive inflammation, persistent infections, the formation of drug-resistant microbial biofilms, and the inability of dermal and/or epidermal cells to respond to reparative stimuli. In aggregate, these pathophysiologic phenomena result in the failure of these wounds to heal.
The publisher's chronic wounds market report gives a thorough understanding of the chronic wounds by including details, such as disease definition, classification, symptoms, etiology, pathophysiology, diagnostic trends.
Chronic Wounds - Epidemiology
The chronic wounds epidemiology division provides insights about historical and current patient pool and forecasted trends for every eight major countries. It helps to recognize the causes of current and forecasted trends by exploring numerous studies and views of key opinion leaders (KOL). This part of the the publisher's report also provides the diagnosed patient pool and their trends along with undertaken assumptions.
The disease epidemiology covered in the report provides historical as well as forecasted epidemiology [segmented by Total Incident Population of Chronic Wound in the G8 Countries, and Type-Specific Incidence of Chronic Wounds in the G8] scenario of chronic wounds in the G8 Countries covering United States, EU5 countries (Germany, Spain, Italy, France, and United Kingdom), Japan, and China from 2017 to 2028.
As per the publisher's analysis, the total Incident Population of Chronic Wounds in the G8 countries was found to be 26,621,142 in 2017 and expected to increase during the forecast period of 2017-2028. The estimates show the incidence was higher in China followed by the United States and among the European 5 countries, Germany had the highest incident population of chronic wounds followed by France and Italy.
On the other hand, Spain had the lowest incident population of chronic wounds. Another estimate of the publisher's analysis based on the type of Chronic Wounds showed that Diabetic Foot Ulcers accounted for the highest patient pool in the G8 countries, while Pressure Ulcers and Venous Ulcers cases account for nearly one-fourth, each, of the total chronic wounds population.
Report Scope
- The report covers a detailed overview of chronic wounds explaining its causes, symptoms, classification, pathophysiology, diagnosis and treatment patterns
- The report provides the insight about the historical and forecasted patient pool for eight major markets covering the United States, EU5 (Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and the UK), Japan & China.
- The report assesses the disease risk and burden and highlights the unmet needs of Chronic wounds
- The report helps to recognize the growth opportunities in the G8 countries with respect to the patient population
- The report provides the segmentation of the disease epidemiology by type-specific cases and severity specific cases of chronic wounds in the G8 countries.
Chronic Wounds Report Key Strengths
- 10-year forecast of chronic wounds epidemiology
- G8 countries coverage
- Total incident population of chronic wounds in the G8 Countries
- Type-specific incident population of chronic wounds in the G8 Countries
Chronic Wounds Report Assessment
- Patient segmentation
- Disease risk and burden
- Risk of disease by the segmentation
- Factors driving growth in a specific patient population
Table of Contents
1. Key Insights
2. Chronic Wounds: Market Overview at a Glance
3. Chronic Wounds: Disease Background and Overview
4. Epidemiology and Patient Population
5. United States Epidemiology
6. EU5 Epidemiology
7. Japan Epidemiology
8. China Epidemiology
9. Appendix
List of Tables
List of Figures