Medical equipment and supplies are used in medical, dental, hospital, pharmacy, and clinical laboratories. Products range from simple bandages, tongue depressors, and syringes, to sophisticated ...
Uline is a leading distributor of packing materials and industrial supplies in North America. The company provides the essential (and often invisible) products that small and large businesses need ...
The Charles and Patsy Collat Industrial Distribution Program at UAB offers a concentration in Medical Equipment and Supplies Distribution. It prepares graduates for careers with manufacturers and ...
In this conversation with Medline CEO Jim Boyle, he outlines the strategy health systems need to build a resilient supply ...
During the COVID-19 pandemic, healthcare supply chain issues were complex and plentiful, creating an unprecedented mess for hospitals struggling to care for an increased load of patients. Hospitals ...
Original Medicare and Medicare Advantage cover durable medical equipment (DME) that is medically necessary, prescribed for use at home, and obtained from an approved supplier. Original Medicare ...
The American Medical Manufacturers Association is advocating for tax incentives and tariffs to encourage more U.S. medical equipment production amid concerns over supply chain disruption following rec ...
St. Denis Medical' creators Justin Spitzer and Eric Ledgin exclusively told Us Weekly if fans can expect 'Superstore' cameos ...
Baxter International plans to restart production in phases by year-end at North Carolina plant hit by Hurricane Helene.
When a CT scanner, MRI scanner or other piece of crucial medical equipment breaks down, medical equipment repairers are the people who troubleshoot the problem and make the fix. Some biomedical ...
The bag was marked Uline, which is is large packaging firm. This silica gel is not consumable, and therefore poses a potential health risk to a cat, if the bag breaks and the animal ingests it by ...
A monthly column recounting the diagnosis of a puzzling medical case. By Sandra G. Boodman. Submit solved medical mysteries to sandra.boodman@washpost.com.