Say the word “warehouse” and many people conjure up images of a dark, dusty, damp place with rows of equipment and boxes piled to the ceiling.
A home medical equipment company’s warehouse certainly can be the source of problems, deficiencies with standards, safety hazards, and infection control issues. But with just a little planning, some elbow grease, and a bit of ongoing monitoring, you can turn your warehouse into a clean, safe, even pleasant environment that improves operational efficiencies and helps your employees do their job well.
The size and structure of storage areas vary greatly from company to company. Certainly, an organization providing liquid oxygen and heavy DME will have a much different warehouse than a company that provides only soft goods and supplies or an organization providing only TENS units and electrodes.
Keep in mind that the standards are consistent regardless of scope of service and reflect the same simple concepts:
Warehouse and storage areas are usually off-limits to the public and customers. So it's easy to let equipment accumulate without putting it away. They can also become a dumping ground for anything that an organization wants to put out of sight.
The reality is that there is potential for major safety and infection control issues in the warehouse. Safety and infection control issues translate into deficiencies for the organization and also make it hard to keep operationally efficient.
Here are 4 easy steps to ensure your warehouse meets HME accreditation standards: