Clinical engineering

Clinical engineers are required to understand all modern medical technologies, as well as train, troubleshoot, and design entire clinical settings.

Clinical engineering is a specialty within biomedical engineering responsible for using medical technology to optimize healthcare delivery.

Clinical engineers train and supervise biomedical equipment technicians (BMETs), working with governmental regulators on hospital inspections and audits, and serve as technological consultants for other hospital staff (i.e., Physicians, Administrators, IT). Clinical engineers also assist manufacturers in improving the design of medical equipment and maintain state-of-the-art hospital supply chains.[1]

With training in both product design and point-of-use experience, clinical engineers bridge the gap between product developers and end-users.

The focus on practical implementations tends to keep clinical engineers oriented towards incremental redesigns, as opposed to revolutionary or cutting-edge ideas far-off of implementation for clinical use. However, there is an effort to expand this time horizon, over which clinical engineers can influence the trajectory of biomedical innovation.[citation needed]

Clinical engineering departments at large hospitals will sometimes hire not only biomedical engineers, but also industrial and systems engineers to address topics such as operations research, human factors, cost analysis, and safety.

  1. ^ Derrico, Pietro; Ritrovato, Matteo; Nocchi, Federico; Faggiano, Francesco; Capussotto, Carlo; Franchin, Tiziana; Vivo, Liliana De (2011-08-23). Clinical Engineering. IntechOpen. ISBN 978-953-307-256-2.

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