Skip to content
Search icon

Are Copper Dressings More Cost-Effective Than Silver Dressings in NHS Wound Care?

NHS wound care cost comparison of copper vs silver dressings in hard-to-heal wounds

Picture of Marketing
Marketing

Are copper dressings more expensive than silver dressings when total cost of wound care is considered?

While dressing acquisition cost is often a consideration when selecting wound care products, clinicians increasingly recognise that the true cost of wound management extends beyond the price of the dressing itself.

For hard-to-heal wounds, factors such as healing time, nursing visits, dressing changes, complications, and patient quality of life can significantly influence overall treatment costs.

In this NHS Drug Tariff comparison, MedCu is lower cost than Aquacel Ag+ Extra across all comparable size bands analysed.

This article explores the available evidence on copper dressings versus silver dressings, and the broader economics of wound care.



1. Are copper dressings more expensive than silver dressings?

The purchase price of a wound dressing represents only one component of wound management costs.

In practice, overall costs may include:

  • nursing time
  • dressing change frequency
  • clinic appointments
  • management of complications
  • prolonged treatment duration
  • patient mobility and quality of life impacts

As a result, a dressing with a higher acquisition cost may still be cost effective if it supports faster healing or reduces overall resource use.



2. What is the biggest cost driver in chronic wound care?

For many chronic wounds, the greatest costs are associated with prolonged treatment rather than the dressing itself.

Hard-to-heal wounds may require:

  • repeated nursing visits
  • frequent dressing changes
  • extended community care input
  • additional antimicrobial interventions
  • longer healing times

Reducing healing time can therefore have a significant impact on total treatment costs.



3. What is the cost difference between Aquacel Ag+ Extra and MEDCu?

The table below compares NHS Drug Tariff pricing for Aquacel Ag+ Extra (silver dressing) against MEDCu (copper dressing equivalent pricing).

Aquacel Ag+ Extra vs MedCu (NHS Drug Tariff Comparison)

Size

Aquacel Ag+ Extra

MEDCu Copper

Saving

5cm x 5cm

£2.21

£1.88

£0.33

10cm x 10cm

£5.26

£4.63

£0.63

10cm x 20cm

£9.93

£7.07

£2.86

20cm x 20cm

£24.63

£14.04

£10.59

Pricing based on NHS Drug Tariff (June 2026).

Clinical interpretation

Across all comparable size bands:

  • MEDCu demonstrates a lower acquisition cost in every matched category
  • The cost savings increase with wound size
  • The largest variance is seen in larger wound formats (20cm x 20cm equivalent)
  • This is particularly relevant in chronic wound pathways where larger dressings are used over extended periods

 



4.
What does clinical evidence show about wound healing and resource use?

Clinical studies suggest that chronic wound healing is strongly linked to overall resource use, particularly where wounds fail to progress despite standard care.

In a prospective single-arm study (Gorel et al., 2023), wounds that had previously responded poorly to silver dressings showed improved healing progression following the introduction of copper dressings.

In addition, a case series by Karpeniuk et al. (2025) reported rapid improvement in hard-to-heal venous leg ulcers, with most wounds achieving closure within approximately 9.6 weeks following copper dressing use.

A separate clinical evaluation (Dhoonmoon, 2025) reported improved wound healing outcomes alongside reduced overall treatment costs, with a mean cost reduction from £2,606 (standard care) to £365 following copper dressing use. This reduction was associated with faster healing and reduced nursing resource requirements.



5. Can faster healing reduce NHS resource use?

Delayed wound healing is a major driver of NHS resource utilisation.

Potential impacts include:

  • increased community nursing visits
  • higher dressing consumption
  • more frequent wound assessments
  • escalation to specialist services
  • prolonged patient care episodes

Across published studies, copper dressings have been associated with improved healing progression and wound bed improvement, which may contribute to reduced overall treatment burden.



6. Are copper dressings a replacement for silver dressings?

Copper and silver dressings should not be viewed as direct replacements in all cases.

Silver dressings continue to play an important role in antimicrobial management, particularly in acute or heavily bioburdened wounds.

However, evidence suggests copper dressings may offer benefits in some hard-to-heal wounds, particularly where healing has stalled despite previous antimicrobial therapy.

Clinical selection should always consider:

  • wound assessment
  • infection status
  • exudate level
  • patient factors
  • local formulary guidance


7. What should clinicians consider when evaluating dressing costs?

Rather than focusing solely on unit price, clinicians and procurement teams may wish to consider:

  • total healing time
  • number of dressing changes required
  • nursing time per episode
  • risk of non-healing or deterioration
  • patient comfort and mobility
  • total cost of care per wound episode

This broader approach provides a more accurate assessment of value in wound management.



Clinical takeaway

  • Dressing acquisition cost is only one component of total wound care expenditure
  • Prolonged healing is often the largest cost driver in chronic wounds
  • MEDCu demonstrates lower acquisition cost than Aquacel Ag+ Extra across matched size bands in this dataset
  • Clinical evidence suggests improved healing outcomes with copper dressings in hard-to-heal wounds, which may reduce overall resource use


References

Gorel O. et al. (2023). Enhanced healing of wounds that responded poorly to silver dressing by copper wound dressings: Prospective single-arm treatment study. Health Science Reports, 7(1):e1816.

Dhoonmoon L. (2025). Healing hard-to-heal wounds and improving quality of life. Journal of Community Nursing, 39(5), 28–33.

Karpeniuk S. et al. (2025). Effective Management of Venous Leg Ulcers by Copper Dressings. International Journal of Clinical Case Reports and Reviews, 31(1).