Get to know the Compeed® brand better
How will the Compeed® plasters help me?
Long-standing expertise
Compeed® has been building its reputation as a leader of blister plasters in France for long enough that its story can be told.
This story begins in 1955 when Elise Sorensen, a Danish nurse, created disposable adhesive pockets to relieve her patients.
But we had to wait until the 80s for the concept to evolve and for hydrocolloid technology to be developed enabling the creation of Compeed® plasters as we know them today.
When was Compeed® officially created?
The Compeed® brand was officially created in 1985 and arrived on the French market ten years later.
Equipped with its hydrocolloid blister plasters, Compeed® then concentrated on new categories like corns, calluses and bunions as well as patches for cold sores.
To this day, Compeed® helps you to heal your blisters quicker and enjoy your life. A range like the Compeed Blister Medium and Compeed Mixed Size Blister plasters, sent in your parcel, have been perfectly developed for different and particularly painful blisters. Enjoy them!
The COMPEED® Blister Patch. Before use, read the instructions. Seek advice from a health professional. This medical device is a regulated health product and for this reason bears the CE marking. Manufacturer: Laboratoire HRA Pharma RCS Nanterre 420 792 582. ML-COM-0419-GP. HRA Pharma France SAS with a capital of €1,540,000, 200 Avenue de Paris, 92320 Chatillon, RCS Nanterre 519 260 525. COM-NLE-0121-GP. January 2021.
The COMPEED® Blister Patch is a medical device. If a claim for medical devices vigilance, as defined below, occurs, report it immediately via our contact form available on the https://www.compeed.fr/contact/ website. Case for medical devices vigilance: any incident or risk of incident, serious or not, calling a medical device into question. By incident, we mean: Any malfunction or any alteration of the characteristics and/or performances of a medical device as well as any inadequacy of the labelling or the instructions. An incident may or may not be associated with an adverse reaction.