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Medical Equipment Repairer

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AVG. SALARY

$58,220

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EDUCATION

Associate's degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

Working in such a technologically advanced field as biomedical engineering requires an understanding of medical equipment technology. But it also requires an ability to communicate with health-care colleagues, both verbally and in writing.

"You need to have really good communication aptitude," says Roy Sharplin. He's a biomedical engineering technologist. "So, [be] able to understand people, communicate clearly, discuss complex ideas. And be able to make 'discovery conversations' work, where you're learning from a person who's having trouble describing what they saw or what they experienced, so that you can know what to do to troubleshoot the device that they're complaining about.

"And also the reverse," adds Sharplin, "where you've now investigated and figured out what was wrong and you need to provide some training-type communication back."

Imaging equipment technician Holly Johnson agrees. "They call us when the equipment isn't working, and this is often left unnoticed until staff need it for patient care. The urgency and emotions involved when needed equipment doesn't perform sometimes makes the communication between the biomed technician and the staff difficult.

"You must be ready to face a range of emotions and greet those emotions with sincerity, understanding, and still manage to deliver whatever news needs to be broken. Great communication is key and, without it, a biomed will not be a biomed for long."

You are a biomedical engineering technician. You need to write a letter to the manufacturer of an imaging device that is producing images that are blurry and hard to interpret. How would you write a polite yet firm business letter requesting a solution to the problem?

In your letter, you will need to report to the manufacturer:

  • The date you received the equipment
  • That you are returning the equipment because you believe it is unsafe or defective because the imaging is below expected quality
  • That you and your colleagues at XYZ hospital have conducted field tests and noted a problem with the equipment

In addition, politely request that the manufacturer inform you when you can expect the repair or replacement of the device.

Contact

  • Email Support
  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

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