equipment maintenance expenses - meaning and definition. What is equipment maintenance expenses
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What (who) is equipment maintenance expenses - definition

PROFESSION
Bmet; BMET; Medical maintenance; Medical Maintenance; HM-8410; Biomedical Equipment Technician

Aircraft maintenance         
  • Autonomous [[Donecle]] [[UAV]] performing an aircraft inspection.
  • Bombardier]] airplane in Dallas, Texas
  • Field maintenance on a [[Cessna 172]] being conducted from a van used to carry tools and parts
  • A [[Panavia Tornado]] undergoing maintenance
  • US Air force technicians disassemble and inspects the [[CFM56]] fan blades of a [[KC-135]], inspected every 1,500 hours.
PERFORMANCE OF TASKS WHICH MAINTAIN AN AIRCRAFT'S CONTINUING AIRWORTHINESS AND OPERATIONAL AVAILABILITY
Power by the Hour; Aircraft Maintenance; Power By The Hour; Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul; Airplane maintenance; Maintenance, repair and overhaul; Automated aircraft inspection; Aviation maintenance
Aircraft maintenance is the performance of tasks required to ensure the continuing airworthiness of an aircraft or aircraft part, including overhaul, inspection, replacement, defect rectification, and the embodiment of modifications, compliance with airworthiness directives and repair.
Resale price maintenance         
PRACTICE WHEREBY A MANUFACTURER AND ITS DISTRIBUTORS AGREE THAT THE DISTRIBUTORS WILL SELL THE MANUFACTURER'S PRODUCT AT CERTAIN PRICES, AT OR ABOVE A PRICE FLOOR OR AT OR BELOW A PRICE CEILING
Fair-Trade Law; Re-sale price maintenance; Price Maintenance; Price maintenance; Retail price maintenance; Retail Price Maintenance
Resale price maintenance (RPM) or, occasionally, retail price maintenance is the practice whereby a manufacturer and its distributors agree that the distributors will sell the manufacturer's product at certain prices (resale price maintenance), at or above a price floor (minimum resale price maintenance) or at or below a price ceiling (maximum resale price maintenance). If a reseller refuses to maintain prices, either openly or covertly (see grey market), the manufacturer may stop doing business with it.
Health maintenance organization         
MEDICAL INSURANCE GROUP THAT PROVIDES HEALTH SERVICES FOR A FIXED ANNUAL FEE
Health Maintenance Organization; Health Maintenance Organizations; Health maintenance organisation; Health maintenance organizations; Health maintenance organisations; HMOs; Health Management Organization; HMO; Health Maintenance Organisations; Health Management Organisation; Health maintenance organization (HMO); Health Maintenance Organisation; Hmo; H.M.O.; Health management organization
In the United States, a health maintenance organization (HMO) is a medical insurance group that provides health services for a fixed annual fee. It is an organization that provides or arranges managed care for health insurance, self-funded health care benefit plans, individuals, and other entities, acting as a liaison with health care providers (hospitals, doctors, etc.

Wikipedia

Biomedical equipment technician

A biomedical engineering/equipment technician/technologist ('BMET') or biomedical engineering/equipment specialist (BES or BMES) is typically an electro-mechanical technician or technologist who ensures that medical equipment is well-maintained, properly configured, and safely functional. In healthcare environments, BMETs often work with or officiate as a biomedical and/or clinical engineer, since the career field has no legal distinction between engineers and engineering technicians/technologists.

BMETs are employed by hospitals, clinics, private sector companies, and the military. Normally, BMETs install, inspect, maintain, repair, calibrate, modify and design biomedical equipment and support systems to adhere to medical standard guidelines but also perform specialized duties and roles. BMETs educate, train, and advise staff and other agencies on theory of operation, physiological principles, and safe clinical application of biomedical equipment maintaining the facility's patient care and medical staff equipment. Senior experienced BMETs perform the official part in the daily management and problem solving of healthcare technology beyond repairs and scheduled maintenance; such as, capitol asset planning, project management, budgeting and personnel management, designing interfaces and integrating medical systems, training end-users to utilize medical technology, and evaluating new devices for acquisition.

The acceptance of the BMET in the private sector was given a big push in 1970 when consumer advocate Ralph Nader wrote an article in which he claimed, "At least 1,200 people a year are electrocuted and many more are killed or injured in needless electrical accidents in hospitals."

BMETs cover a vast array of different functional fields and medical devices. However, BMETs do specialize and focus on specific kinds of medical devices and technology management—(i.e., an imaging repair specialist, laboratory equipment specialist, healthcare technology manager) and works strictly on medical imaging and/or medical laboratory equipment as well as supervises and/or manages HTM departments. These experts come from either from the military, or an OEM background. An imaging repair specialist usually does not have much, if any, general BMET training. However, there are situations where a BMET will cross-train into these functional fields.

Examples of different areas of medical equipment technology are:

  • Diagnostic Imaging:
    • Radiographic and Fluoroscopic X-ray,
    • Diagnostic ultrasound,
    • Mammography,
    • Nuclear imaging,
    • Positron emission tomography (PET),
    • Medical imaging,
    • Computed tomography (CT), linear tomography,
    • Picture archiving and communication systems (PACS),
    • Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI scanner),
  • Physiological monitoring,
  • Electron microscope,
  • Sterilization,
  • LASERs,
  • Dental,
  • Telemedicine,
  • Heart lung device,
  • DaVinci Surgical Robot,
  • Optometry,
  • Surgical instruments,
  • Infusion pumps,
  • Anesthesia,
  • Laboratory,
  • Dialysis,
  • Respiratory services (ventilators),
  • Gas therapy equipment
  • Computer networking systems integration,
  • Information technology,
  • Patient monitoring,
  • Cardiac diagnostics

BMETs work closely with nursing staff, and medical materiel personnel to obtain parts, supplies, and equipment and even closer with facility management to coordinate equipment installations requiring certain facility infrastructure requirements/modifications.