Business
GE HealthCare and reLink Medical Collaborate to Help Reduce Medical Device Waste for Healthcare Providers
The average 250-bed hospital in the U.S. has approximately 2,000 medical devices that may require end-of-life monitoring and planning for potential

About this update from Ge Healthcare Technologies Inc.
[{"type":"text","content":"\n\nThe average 250-bed hospital in the U.S. has approximately 2,000 medical devices that may require end-of-life monitoring and planning for potential disposition.1\n\n\n\nGE HealthCare and reLink Medical will help healthcare providers manage their end-of-life medical equipment, and provide them with a potential revenue stream, by selling, recycling or donating their equipment.\n\n\n\nThis collaboration between GE HealthCare and reLink Medical will further advance both companies’ commitment to sustainability.\n\n\n\n CHICAGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--\nGE HealthCare (Nasdaq: GEHC) and reLink Medical today announced a collaboration to deliver asset management solutions to healthcare providers to help reduce medical device waste, increase operational efficiency and maximize their equipment utilization. This collaboration features a standardized medical equipment disposition solution involving selling, recycling or donating equipment that is no longer needed.\n\nThis press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20231026944533/en/Management of medical equipment disposition. Photo courtesy of reLink Medical.\nEach year, healthcare providers retire approximately ten percent of their medical assets from use.2 Attempting to manage medical device waste independently can often require staff time and create cumbersome processes filled with hidden costs. As providers continue to face cost pressures from the COVID-19 pandemic, managing budgets and uncovering cost savings is a priority.\n\n\n“A potential and often overlooked source of expense for providers is medical device waste, which includes aging, or end-of-life, medical devices that sit idle in a healthcare provider’s inventory,” said Mohamed El-Demerdash, President, U.S. & Canada Service, GE HealthCare. “With this collaboration, GE HealthCare will help healthcare providers manage their clinical devices for the full lifecycle of their equipment, a true wing-to-wing solution, from capital planning and purchasing to maintenance and final disposition of the equipment.”\n\n\nWhen the disposition solution entails selling the medical equipment, a percentage of the revenue from that sale is returned to the healthcare provider in the form of credits that they can use to purchase equipment or parts, invest in training for their technicians and en...