Solving a National Chronic Wound Crisis
Chronic wound prevalence is expected to grow more than 50% by 2030. An aging population, obesity, diabetes, chronic conditions, and sedentary lifestyles are all driving factors behind this growth of chronic wounds.
The expense, loss of productivity, and diminished quality of life for wound patients comes at great cost to the individual patient, their health plan, and our overall healthcare system.
+10.2M
patients with chronic wounds annually
$180B
annual spend on wound care treatment
$13,335
average Medicare cost for all wound types
15%
wound prevalence for Medicare patients
Complete In-Home Chronic Wound Care Program
Esperta Health built the industry’s only complete in-home chronic wound care program that delivers real-time responsive care plans to improve healing outcomes and significantly reduce costs.
This unique program, driven by clinical expertise, evidence-based guidelines, and innovative technology, standardizes wound care wherever members live.


Meeting the Ongoing Challenges of Chronic Wounds
Chronic wounds are difficult to treat. Despite consuming tremendous healthcare resources, outcomes remain poor. Esperta Health’s approach to wound care management improves outcomes for patients and reduces costs by delivering wound-certified specialists at the point of care.
We manage hard to heal chronic wounds
Our team of 100% wound-certified specialists care for your members’ most prevalent wounds in the comfort of your home.

Diabetic Foot Ulcers
Wounds anywhere on the foot of a person with diabetes.

Venous
Ulcers
Non-healing skin openings on the lower leg, ankle, or foot due to vein disease.

Arterial
Ulcers
Wounds caused by lack of blood flow through narrow or damaged arteries.

Pressure Injuries or Ulcers
Damaged skin found where bones are close to the skin’s surface.
Managing the Full Spectrum of Wounds in the Home
In addition to the wounds above, our team of clinicians care for members with all wound types.
- Chronic Venous Insufficiency Ulcers
- Malignancy-related Ulcers
- Lymphedema-related Ulcers
- Surgical Wounds
- Burns
- Atypical Wounds
- Autoimmune Wounds
- Wound Caused by Infections
- Non-Healing Wounds








