Medical equipment

Revision as of 21:41, 4 October 2025 by Drakeula (talk | contribs) (Category:Medical industry)

⚠️ A deletion request has been made for this article

There has been a deletion request for this page for the following reason:

Article is too vague and has virtually no content. Somewhat redundant with the medical ventilators page.


This request will be reviewed and acted upon by the wiki moderation team within one week of the template being added.

To appeal this deletion request, please make an entry at the Moderator's noticeboard.


Article Status Notice: This Article is a stub


This article is underdeveloped, and needs additional work to meet the wiki's Content Guidelines and be in line with our Mission Statement for comprehensive coverage of consumer protection issues. Learn more ▼

Medical equipment/medical devices have some consumer issues that set them apart from many other common devices. Some devices are vital to a user’s life or ability to function, such as pacemakers, ventilators, or prosthetics. Ownership and payment may be more complex, with equipment owned by a care facility, or paid for by insurance. Some devices or supplies are only available with physician approval (e.g., oxygen concentrators, CPAP). Many devices fall under more careful regulation, such as by the Food and Drug administration, or Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA). Data collected by medical devices can be extremely personal, but users are often shut out from accessing it. There may also be issues with users getting control of their devices. Even when the device is implanted in a users body, others sometimes assert that they should have control, and the user should be denied autonomy.

Standard consumer issues, like right to repair, right to own, interoperability, privacy, and security also apply.

Various medical equipment and the companies that produce them have come into scrutiny due to anti-consumer practices.

Issues

  • Right to repair - access to manuals, supplies and parts for maintenance and repair. (e.g., Wheelchairs, ventilators, etc.)
  • Right to own -
    • access to data from your personal device (e.g., CPAP, pacemaker, CGM).
    • control of your devices. (e.g., Insulin pumps)
    • Interoperability - proprietary supplies/consumables. (Insulin, CGM)
    • Cost and inconvenience of third party support.
  • Rug pull - loss of function/access to devices (including implanted devices). (Neural stimulators)

Examples

Echographs

MRI

CT-Scanners

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation

Terumo Cardiovascular blocks 3rd party repair of the Advanced Perfusion System 1 Heart Lung Machine.[1]

Ventilators

Main article: Medical ventilator

At the beginning of the Covid 19 pandemic, ventilators were suddenly in very high demand. Digital rights management and lack of right to repair made the equipment shortage worse, and probably increased mortality.

Neural stimulators

Implanted devices become inoperable when companies abandon them.

Pacemakers

Lack access to your data.

Artificial Pancreas (glucose level monitoring and insulin delivery).

Continuous Glucose Monitor (CGM)

Insulin pumps

Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP/APAP/BiPAP)

Data access. Control.

3B CPAP Devices (3b Medical) (ReactHealth) access to patient data removed, forcing users to use more expensive 3rd parties, or lose autonomy.

Wheelchairs

Repair.

Software

A study was conducted in Cambridge in relation to software-dependent medical devices and how they would benefit from right to repair.[2]

References

  1. Maxwell, Thomas (23 Jan 2025). "Medical Device Company Suddenly Stops Hospitals From Fixing Machines Themselves". Gizmodo. Retrieved 16 Mar 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. Lindgren, Lars; Kesselheim, Aaron S.; Kramer, Daniel B. (8 Mar 2023). "The Right to Repair Software-Dependent Medical Devices". Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 16 Mar 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)