New data shows that delaying bed maintenance costs hospitals far more in downtime, labor, and lost throughput than proactive service plans.

Dallas, TX Emeritus, a Veteran-Owned healthcare equipment service provider, is urging hospital administrators to re-evaluate the true cost of reactive maintenance. According to field data from partner facilities, addressing bed failures only after breakdown results in up to 50% higher service costs per incident.

The issue extends well beyond repairs. Delayed maintenance often leads to:

  • Extended bed downtime due to part sourcing delays
  • Increased use of overtime labor
  • Repeated failures from symptom-only fixes

“Hospitals lose not just time, but also revenue and staff efficiency when beds go down unexpectedly,” said a spokesperson for Emeritus. “Preventative service isn’t an expense-it’s an investment in operational reliability.”

Emeritus’s preventative maintenance programs provide:

  • Scheduled inspections and servicing
  • Wear-part replacements before failure
  • Real-time tracking of maintenance history and asset condition

Facilities partnering with Emeritus have reported a 30% reduction in total maintenance spend and significantly improved bed availability. These improvements lead to better patient throughput, fewer surgical delays, and smoother ER admissions.

As healthcare systems continue to face budget constraints and rising patient volumes, Emeritus highlights preventative maintenance as a smart, data-driven strategy for reducing hidden costs and maintaining high-quality care.

About Emeritus

Emeritus is a Veteran-Owned healthcare technology service provider specializing in preventative maintenance, repairs, and lifecycle management for hospital beds and patient mobility equipment.

For more information, visit www.emerituscs.com

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