Medical Device Company Tells Hospitals They're No Longer Allowed to Fix Machine That Costs Six FiguresHospitals are increasingly being forced into maintenance contracts with device manufacturers, driv
from piratepost@poliverso.org to technology@lemmy.world on 22 Jan 15:46
https://poliverso.org/objects/0477a01e-4867-9112-e8a3-13a661908458

Medical Device Company Tells Hospitals They're No Longer Allowed to Fix Machine That Costs Six Figures

Hospitals are increasingly being forced into maintenance contracts with device manufacturers, driving up costs.

The manufacturer of a machine that costs six figures used during heart surgery has told hospitals that it will no longer allow hospitals’ repair technicians to maintain or fix the devices and that all repairs must now be done by the manufacturer itself, according to a letter obtained by 404 Media. The change will require hospitals to enter into repair contracts with the manufacturer, which will ultimately drive up medical costs, a person familiar with the devices said.

404media.co/medical-device-com…

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Nurse_Robot@lemmy.world on 22 Jan 16:50 next collapse

IIRC this is the reason McDonald’s ice cream machines were always down, because the Taylor company that made them had this exact same contract, but they finally reversed that policy a few years ago. Now Terumo Cardiovascular is doing the exact same shitty practice, likely with the exact same outcome: broken machines that don’t work when you need them to. One step forward two steps back in this fucking dystopia

WordBox@lemmy.world on 22 Jan 17:06 next collapse

Taylor/McD goes deeper than that. Tit for tat bs.

Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe on 22 Jan 18:15 collapse

Even worse, the McD ice cream machine issue was caused my McD themselves, by having requirements around cleaning cycles that were tighter than the machine could do.

The same machines worked fine at other companies.

eager_eagle@lemmy.world on 22 Jan 16:56 next collapse

same rotten practices as John Deere and other manufactures, now disguised as “the risk to patient safety is too high.”

you know what else is high risk? Not repairing machines because it’s unaffordable.

alexc@lemmy.world on 22 Jan 17:14 next collapse

Guys, you’re not thinking of the Shareholders and their need to survive open-wallet surgery here…

NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world on 22 Jan 17:17 next collapse

Illegal here.

Poor countries where this is still legally possible.

Read about John Deere.

[deleted] on 22 Jan 19:16 next collapse

.

anubis119@lemmy.world on 22 Jan 19:32 next collapse

Somebody turn on the CAT symbol.

4am@lemm.ee on 22 Jan 21:50 next collapse

Businesses sure seem to love Louis Rossman content because they just keep feeding him

MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 22 Jan 23:15 next collapse

Interesting, it sounds like the hospitals should return the devices and switch to something else. Would probably require a court case to force them to take it back.

GreenKnight23@lemmy.world on 23 Jan 01:15 next collapse

good luck with that. the shell company that holds the IP rights only works with one vendor to manufacture it. so nobody else can make it or sell it.

meyotch@slrpnk.net on 23 Jan 12:27 collapse

That is far from ‘how it works’ with capital equipment of this cost. It’s like steering the titanic to change a major piece of diagnostic equipment. These types of devices are integrated into the health records databases, they require gas supply of various sorts, you might need to knock out a wall to remove it, which shuts down other critical lab functions.

All in all, in my experience installing lab automation, it took over two years from the moment the decision is made to buy a 6-7 figure system to getting the first real patient data from that system. It involves architects, contractors, medical and lab directors, training, hand holding, lawsuits.

So it’s a type of vendor lock-in far worse than anything else I have encountered.

AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net on 23 Jan 09:59 collapse

Reminds me of the Medtronic ventilators that got hacked to unlock them when Medtronic insisted on similar nonsense during the pandemic