Hospitals have the expertise, the sterile environment, and the wound care teams. But home is where patients are comfortable — and where they want to be. The antimicrobial wound care dressing market forecast shows that hospitals are the largest end‑user segment, but home healthcare settings are the fastest‑growing, with a CAGR above 9%. Why? Because telemedicine and visiting nurses make home wound care feasible.
What's the catch? Home care requires motivated patients and caregivers. Dressings must be easy to apply and remove, and patients need to recognise signs of infection (redness, heat, pus). The antimicrobial wound care dressing market analysis notes that moisture management is the fastest‑growing mechanism of action — keeping the wound just wet enough to heal, but not so wet that it macerates.
Smart dressings with colour‑changing indicators (pH, temperature) are in development. They could alert patients or nurses when infection is brewing, without removing the dressing.
The bottom line: home wound care can work, but it's not for everyone. If you're not confident, stick with clinic visits. A healed wound is better than a cheap mistake.