Investing in new medical equipment is one of the most significant decisions a healthcare facility, be it a major hospital, an Ambulatory Surgery Center (ASC), or a specialty clinic, will ever make. These assets are the lifeblood of clinical operations and can directly influence patient outcomes, staff efficiency, and financial sustainability.
In the complex healthcare environment of a hospital or ASC, medical equipment purchase decisions are not always simple. They can be a strategic, multidisciplinary process rooted in planning and evaluation. Failure to plan and haphazard evaluations can lead to costly downtime, regulatory non-compliance, clinical workflow bottlenecks, and, most critically, lower the quality of patient care.
This guide will:
Once equipment ‘wants’ have been vetted and reframed as ‘needs’ it is understandable that the immediate reaction is to run out and buy immediately (before anyone changes their mind). But reacting can cause mistakes that carry the potential of impacting patient care or incurring unplanned costs.
Here are 5 of the most common mistakes associated with capital medical equipment purchasing:
Rather than reacting to the green light to purchase needed healthcare equipment, respond and avoid these and other purchasing mistakes.
Beginning with the want (need) for capital medical equipment purchases, it is a best practice to respond to the request, to methodically consider the bigger picture before placing that purchase order.
Here are 10 practical considerations that, while they require a time investment, will in the long run return equipment purchases that support patient care, efficiency, and the bottom line.
The first and most critical step in the medical equipment acquisition process is an intentional assessment of genuine clinical need. Simply replacing an aging unit or chasing the newest technology can be a mistake.
Why it matters: New medical equipment must solve a demonstrable clinical problem, fill a capacity gap, or support a new, profitable service line. Clinical teams should be involved to define the required specifications (e.g., maximum patient weight, required image resolution, procedure volume capacity) based on the current and projected patient population.
Value: Needs assessments mitigate "shelf-ware" (expensive equipment that is underutilized) and helps ensure the equipment aligns with the facility’s mission and patient demographic.
Medical equipment does not operate in a vacuum. It must integrate seamlessly with existing IT networks and physical infrastructure.
Why it matters: This consideration spans two areas:
Risk Avoided: Considering compatibility with existing systems and infrastructure can help eliminate the risk of an expensive piece of equipment sitting idle because it cannot be plugged in or cannot share critical patient data.
Compliance is non-negotiable and constantly evolving in healthcare. This consideration is a defense against significant liability, fines, or operational shutdown.
Why it matters: Medical equipment must meet all relevant federal, state, and local regulations. Additionally, healthcare equipment must comply with facility-specific guidelines for infection prevention and control (for example: ease of terminal cleaning).
Practical Tip: Ask vendors to provide clear documentation that confirms the equipment meets standards set by accreditation bodies like The Joint Commission (TJC).
Purchase price is just the beginning. TCO is the true measure of equipment’s financial impact over its useful life.
Why it matters: TCO considers the initial capital expense plus all associated operational costs:
TCO = Capital Cost + (Consumables + Maintenance + Utilities + Staffing + Downtime Cost) * Lifetime
For an interventional radiology suite, for example, the cost of specialized catheters and contrast media can quickly outpace the machine's purchase price. For a lab analyzer, the recurring cost of reagents can be appreciable.
Value: TCO offers an apples-to-apples comparison between competing systems to reveal the most economically sensible option over 5 to 10 years.
It is a fact; medical equipment will inevitably fail or require routine upkeep. How quickly and effectively the equipment can be restored to optimal working order influences its value.
Why it matters: Downtime is one of the biggest hidden costs in healthcare. A broken scanner means lost revenue and delayed patient diagnoses. A best practice, evaluate the vendor’s approach to service by answering questions like these:
Risk Avoided: Vetting a vendor’s service(s) protects clinical operations from extended down time and the associated revenue and patient satisfaction losses.
Vendors and healthcare equipment distributors are not just suppliers; they are a long-term partner in medical equipment acquisition, and by extension a partner in patient care.
Why it matters: A robust warranty defines the vendor’s liability for initial defects, but a comprehensive Service Level Agreement (SLA) dictates the ongoing relationship. Scrutinize the SLA for:
Practical Tip: Speak with other facilities who have used the vendor’s equipment for at least three to five years to get a realistic view of post-sale support.
Another healthcare truth, even the best equipment is useless if staff cannot operate it efficiently or safely.
Why it matters: New equipment often requires some level of training. To determine the training resources available for the new equipment, consider answering these questions:
Value: Training maximizes the return on investment by ensuring the equipment is used to its full capacity immediately following installation.
Technology evolves rapidly these days. It follows then that strategic planning for medical equipment acquisition should require a clear understanding of the equipment’s expected useful life.
Why it matters: It is a best practice to know when equipment will become obsolescent Answering the questions below can help determine obsolescence and next steps at that time:
Risk Avoided: Considering the life cycle of medical equipment before purchase can help prevent unplanned, expensive replacement of a unit that is too outdated to function efficiently down the road.
The global supply chain has added a layer of volatility to capital equipment planning.
Why it matters: Understanding the expected lead time separating the purchase order and delivery, is essential for capital budgeting, facility readiness, and planning training.
Practical Tip: Ask the vendor for guaranteed delivery dates and discuss penalties for failure to meet them. If the equipment uses proprietary consumables (e.g., specialized printer paper, unique sterilization chemicals), assess the vendor’s history of keeping those supplies readily available.
Transitioning crated equipment to operational assets requires coordinating receiving teams, clinical staff, facilities, and biomedical equipment technicians.
Why it matters: Logistics planning covers everything from the moment the equipment leaves the warehouse to the final clinical sign-off. Consider these tasks associated with medical equipment delivery and installation:
Risk Avoided: Minimizes facility disruption and delays to the "go-live" date.
While not exhaustive, these ten considerations lay the foundation for a strategic and structured approach to medical equipment acquisition. By carefully evaluating clinical needs, total cost of ownership, vendor partnerships, and long-term serviceability, healthcare administrators can make capital medical equipment purchases that strengthen both patient care and operational performance, today and into the future.
Acquiring medical equipment is more than just checking off a line item on a capital budget spreadsheet. It is a strategic decision that can impact the quality, efficiency, and safety of patient care for years to come. Partnering with CME Corp., specialists in capital healthcare and life sciences equipment, can help ensure you are purchasing equipment that not only conforms to today’s medical environment but also positions you for the future.
CME Account Managers are healthcare and life sciences equipment experts. Their expert guidance can help you evaluate healthcare products and their features, so you select the equipment that best aligns to your needs. And, with CAD-based layout and design services our sales team can offer you the advantage of seeing how the healthcare equipment you are evaluating will interact with your environment.
Our relationships with over 2,000 manufacturers positions us to be ready with alternative product recommendations that do not compromise function or performance. when the frustrating reality of supply chain challenges or budget constraints hit.
In addition to CAD-based layout design services, we offer end-to-end integrated services that set us apart as the nation’s premier specialty distributor of equipment used in healthcare.
CME employed direct-to-site delivery and installation teams (DTS) have been trained by the manufacturers we work with and are experts in the set-up of healthcare equipment.
Professional in-house project management teams support our DTS services with centrally managed logistics, warehousing, staging, and assembly that lay the foundation for seamless delivery - regardless of whether the equipment is being purchased through CME or directly from the manufacturer.
Rounding out our comprehensive offering of services complementing our healthcare equipment expertise are CME employed Biomedical Equipment Technicians (BMETs). We are available help in-house BMETs with equipment check-in, asset tagging, preventive maintenance, and repairs.
About CME: CME Corp is the nation’s premier source for healthcare equipment, turnkey logistics, and biomedical services, representing 2 million+ products from more than 2,000 manufacturers. With two corporate offices and 35+ service centers, our mission is to help healthcare facilities nationwide reduce the cost of the equipment they purchase, make their equipment specification, delivery, installation, and maintenance processes more efficient, and help them seamlessly launch, renovate and expand on schedule.