From the May 2022 issue of HealthCare Business News magazine
By John Sloss
As medical technology evolves, the expectation of healthcare providers with regard to product service, and the nature of service agreements, evolve as well. While in the past, most med tech service agreements addressed preventive maintenance needs and often had a break/fix element rolled in, multiple dynamics are converging to change the definition and scope of service.
The healthcare technology management (HTM) labor shortage is having a significant impact on service delivery. As large numbers of HTM professionals near retirement age, and the education programs for clinical engineering decrease, the market struggles to attract individuals to meet the demand. As a result, hospitals, third party service providers and medical device original equipment manufacturers (OEM) are all competing for the same resources.
Another major factor shaping the service agreement landscape is the evolution of technology within medical devices; such as connectivity and data sharing between devices and with hospital electronic medical record (EMR) systems. The HTM professional skill set required today is quite different than it was in recent past, along with the type of service desired.
At the same time, hospitals continue to struggle with cost containment. Medical equipment acquisition and maintenance are a major investment; therefore, hospital leaders are seeking ways to not only save money in this area but also to capitalize on insights that advanced technologies can provide.
While in the past a hospital wanted specific information related to device uptime, now they are delving deeper and demanding more meaningful and complex information, such as device utilization. The question is no longer, “what is my device’s uptime?”, but rather, “how often was my device ready for use, how often was it used, and how did it impact patient care delivery?”
All of this is reshaping how service agreements are constructed, provided and managed. In the future, I see service evolving from traditional one-off visits from an HTM professional for preventive maintenance and repairs, to a “service as a service” model where the OEM leverages HTM resources to provide hospitals with insights derived from its devices.
While hospitals in the future will still require service agreements that include preventive maintenance and repairs to keep devices patient ready, services will need to continue expanding to include these value-added components. The OEM/HTM becomes less of a break/fix entity and more of a partner, offering ongoing business intelligence that hospitals can leverage to maximize their device assets, drive greater profitability, better patient outcomes and better cost containment.