How to choose Intensive Care & Emergency Equipment
Intensive Care & Emergency Equipment refers to the life-support and acute monitoring devices deployed in ICUs, EDs, code carts, and ambulance/transport settings — primarily mechanical ventilators, multi-parameter patient monitors, defibrillators (manual and AED), infusion/syringe pumps, anesthesia workstations, and crash-cart accessories. The Joint Commission classifies these as high-risk medical devices — including heart-lung machines, ventilators, defibrillators, and robotic assistive devices — because their failure could cause serious injuries or death to patients or related personnel. Buyers are typically hospital procurement officers, biomedical/clinical engineering directors, and ASC or critical-access medical directors planning capital replacement, surge capacity, or new-unit build-outs.