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By Morten Kjær Johansen, Senior Specialist, FORCE Technology

The development and marketing of medical devices is highly regulated and many pitfalls exist, potentially complicating and increasing costs. Here are 3 key questions to begin.

As a test house, FORCE Technology is seeing a growing demand for accredited approvals. The increasing demand clearly demonstrates that requirements are tightening, and the control functions are working as intended.

For manufacturers of medical devices it is important to notice that the regulation is not simply a 'bad thing'. The regulation helps keep the market free of unacceptable - at times dangerous - products by setting the bar high for approved marketing. At the same time, the relevant standards contain excellent process-oriented methods that ensure the efficient execution of development projects with a few reversals.

The best approach to regulation and standards is to strive to achieve compliance from the outset of any development project. All too often, companies experience a relatively heavy burden of backlog in the form of lacking documentation, incorrect labelling, lack of security mechanisms, etc., and the result is increased costs and delays as a result of necessary updates and the need to repeat costly accredited tests.

3 central questions

Initially, any manufacturer of medical equipment should ask a number of clarifying questions:

  1. What is the intended use of the product? (Curing of a disease? Remedial treatment, relief or monitoring, examination of a specific disability? Contraception? On which body part is the product to be used?)
  2. Who should use the product? (Gender, age, demographics, disability and any restrictions. Consider these for all user groups - installers, healthcare assistants, relatives, patients, etc.)
  3. Where is the product to be used? (at home, in hospital, in home care, during transportation, in emergency vehicles, on aircraft, helicopters, etc.)

These are very important questions. Let's go through them one at a time.

Risk and safety management medical devices
The quality of medical devices can mean the difference between life and death. Therefore, there are many regulatory requirements for development and marketing.

Test in climate chamber at FORCE Technology
A climate chamber test exposes the product to moisture and temperature fluctuations.

3 questions