Medical Equipment Companies | CME Blog

How Equipment Disposition Becomes a Profit Generator

Written by CME Corp Staff | July 10, 2019

During a recent visit to a large medical academic center in California, CME Chief Strategy Officer Cindy Juhas walked across campus through an underground tunnel system that connects buildings. Every underground path was lined with retired equipment. Cindy walked among forgotten hospital beds, stretchers, mobile ECG units, shelving units, and carts. The tunnels had become an equipment catacomb. There must be a better way, and there is!

Those retired pieces of equipment should be viewed as a revenue stream for the facility.

Who Takes the Lead on Disposition?

Equipment disposition has long been a problem in many healthcare systems. The responsible department varies by facility, often landing in the gray areas between the Biomedical team and the Facilities Management department.

Some systems operate their own disposition department, but by and large, many acute care facilities have a basement or warehouse full of abandoned and decommissioned equipment. The notion is that retired equipment can be sourced for replacement parts, but is this the most effective way to use decommissioned equipment?

When your equipment reaches its end-of-life within your facility, there are five ways to retire it.

The 5 Pathways of Disposition

1. Disposal

2. Retain for parts

3. Donation to a charity

4. Send to Recycling Facility

5. Refurbish and resell

The first two options are mentioned only to get them out of thought and out of mind quickly! Both hard disposal and retaining old inventory for parts should always be the last resort of any facility. These options are the least cost-effective choices, especially if you are leasing warehouse space for these old assets.

So how does one evaluate the best pathway for equipment, and how can systems best monetize these assets? Your Biomed department knows how to execute this process, but do they have the resources and time to do it in real time effectively?

The best way might be to find a partner that can help you with these decisions and execute the process. There are outside companies that can be recruited to help you donate, recycle and refurbish your out-of-use assets.

3 Equipment Disposition Processes to Consider

  • Equipment Buyback: 
    Retired equipment is taking up space in your facility or a storage space. Contact a company that specializes in equipment disposition. They will evaluate the equipment, let you know how much you may get, and schedule a pick-up time. Freight costs should not be charged for this service.

  • Project-Based Equipment Removal: 
    You are doing an Equipment Upgrade or Replacement Project. Many times, the manufacturer or distributor that you bought the equipment from should be able to take the old equipment (for a nominal fee) at the same time they deliver the new items.

  • Full-Service Equipment Disposition Contract: 
    You need a complete solution for all your equipment disposition needs. A customized agreement with a disposition company can include the following: Timely pick-up of retired or decommissioned equipment; evaluation of equipment at their warehouse to assess whether to refurbish and resell, donation to a designated charity, recycle at a designated recycling facility or disposal; execution of the chosen pathway; customized periodical reports itemizing disposition status and profit; and most importantly, it should include a profit-sharing.

A national IDN recently signed a contract with their healthcare equipment distributor. To date, only 30 percent of their facilities are using the service, but they have already realized close to $100,000 in shared profit. That is after actively using the contract for only five months and starting very slowly. The potential is incredible. Not only is the IDN making a profit, but they freed up valuable space in their facilities and leased off-site warehouses.

Contact CME to discuss donation or equipment removal options for your project.

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.