The latest survey in 2011 showed that the global disposable medical device market reached 100 billion US dollars

According to relevant agencies, developed countries are the major markets for disposable medical devices worldwide. In addition, some previously neglected countries and regions have gradually become new markets for disposable medical devices, including West Africa and Southeast Asian countries.

In the past 10 years, the global disposable medical device industry has achieved unprecedented development. According to the latest foreign reports, the total sales of the global disposable medical device market reached 89 billion U.S. dollars in 2009. In the United States, Europe and other developed countries and regions, disposable medical device sales have accounted for about 45% of total sales in the medical device market. It is estimated that by 2011, the global disposable medical device market is expected to reach nearly 100 billion US dollars.

The United States is the largest disposable medical device market in the world, with sales accounting for more than 40% of the global market. Europe is the second largest disposable medical device market in the world, with a market size of approximately 29% of the global market. In countries including Japan, China, India, and other emerging Asian industrial countries, the total disposable medical device sales accounted for approximately 17% to 18% of the international market.

Among them, the non-woven fabric made of high-molecular polymer PP is low in price and can be sterilized and sterilized by commonly used sterilization means such as ultraviolet ray or ethylene oxide, and is very suitable for manufacturing various medical textiles, sanitary materials, bandages and other products. Instead of cotton fabric products.

Asian emerging industrial countries have seen rapid growth in consumption

Medical textiles or sanitary materials made of non-woven fabrics are more environmentally friendly because they can be reused as recycled plastic materials and used for recycling. Most of the hygienic materials that can be made by cotton can be used to produce similar products such as surgical pads, sterile outer packagings, wound protection materials, foot protection materials, hygiene masks, hospital bed sheets, and cover cloths needed for surgery. The doctor wears a gown and patient clothing and so on.

It is understood that in recent years, only the United States and Canada have consumed about 3.3 billion square meters of non-woven fabrics each year for the processing of various sanitary materials and medical textiles. In the United States, the annual total sales volume of disposable nonwovens made of sanitary materials and medical textiles totals 3.4 billion U.S. dollars, ranking first in the world; Europe ranks second with total sales of approximately 2.3 billion U.S. dollars; Japan, China, India, and other emerging Asian countries The consumption of disposable nonwovens hygiene materials and medical textiles in industrial countries has increased rapidly. The relevant parties predict that by 2011, the global disposable nonwovens sanitary materials and medical textiles market will exceed US$5 billion in sales.

Since disposable nonwovens made of nonwovens and medical textiles can save valuable cotton fiber raw materials, and the price of nonwovens is only 1/4 that of cotton fibers, more and more sanitary materials and medical textiles will be used instead. Non-woven disposable products to reduce production costs. The person in charge of the American Medical Device Industry Association believes that in the coming years, the annual growth rate of disposable non-woven surgical materials and sanitary materials in the international market will reach about 15%, which will become another international market after the disposable syringes. Best-selling disposable equipment products.

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