Clinical device management is healthcare outsourcing’s next frontier

NEVADA, UNITED STATES — United States hospitals spend more than $90 billion annually managing medical equipment — yet most are doing it with fragmented data, manual tracking, and general-purpose IT systems never designed for clinical environments.
As connected device volumes grow and cybersecurity threats escalate, clinical device management (CDM) is emerging as one of healthcare’s most urgent operational gaps.
Fragmented device management creates patient risk
The gap between how hospitals manage clinical devices and how they should is widening with every device added to the network.
Writing in HealthcareITToday in June 2026, Adam Byer, Chief Delivery Officer at iTech AG, described how traditional healthcare technology approaches offer limited visibility into real-time device performance and how risks evolve across a device’s lifecycle.
“22% of healthcare organizations have experienced cyberattacks that directly impacted medical devices, and three-quarters of these incidents disrupted patient care,” according to the 2025 Medical Device Cybersecurity Index by RunSafe Security.
Inconsistent maintenance, missing calibration procedures, and fragmented device data across siloed systems are creating unexpected downtime, inaccurate diagnostic results, and gaps in patient record integration.
Traditional enterprise asset management (EAM) systems were built for facilities and operations — not for clinical engineering. They cannot adequately address the documentation, traceability, and compliance standards that medical devices require.
CDM unifies device lifecycle and compliance
The distinction between managing a clinical device and managing a standard IT asset is not administrative. It is a patient care decision.
“While all clinical devices are assets, not all assets carry the responsibility of patient care,” said Jeremy Tipton, Director of Healthcare and Life Science at iTech AG.
CDM classifies device criticality based on patient safety and clinical risk, automates maintenance scheduling against manufacturer guidance, and provides structured recall management workflows — all within a regulatory compliance framework.
iTech AG delivers CDM through the ServiceNow Platform, enabling healthcare organizations to consolidate lifecycle management, real-time risk scoring, compliance monitoring, and cybersecurity oversight under a single operational architecture.
The healthcare outsourcing sector is positioned to absorb the CDM operational burden that most health systems cannot build internally. Biomed engineering services, clinical IT management, device lifecycle coordination, and regulatory compliance support are already established outsourcing functions — CDM represents their natural convergence point.
For health systems managing thousands of connected devices across distributed campuses, outsourced CDM is not an edge case. It is the scalable answer to a problem that grows with every device added to the clinical network.

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