What does an ICU Patient Monitor cost?
*New bedside units range from $2,500–$15,000+; central stations add $5,000–$40,000 depending on bed capacity and features. Refurbished options cut costs by 30–50%.*
Buying guides, product comparisons, price estimates, and sourcing advice specific to patient monitors (icu). Neutral, procurement-literate research with sources.
*New bedside units range from $2,500–$15,000+; central stations add $5,000–$40,000 depending on bed capacity and features. Refurbished options cut costs by 30–50%.*
ICU patient monitors are multi-parameter bedside devices that continuously track ECG, SpO₂, NIBP, IBP, respiration, temperature, and often EtCO₂/cardiac output for high-acuity patients. In ICUs they typically provide continuous ECG, SpO₂, NIBP, temperature, respiration, and often invasive blood pressure (IBP), capnography (EtCO₂), and cardiac output, with modularity (hot-swappable parameter modules) helping tailor setups, while prioritizing alarm accuracy, trend review, and integration with central stations. Buyers are biomedical/clinical engineering departments, ICU medical directors, and procurement officers conducting fleet refreshes (typically every 7–10 years) or standardizing across networked critical-care units.