From diagnostic kits to surgical systems – medical devices come in many forms, but all share one thing: They require precise handling, careful storage and reliable delivery. Whether small-scale instruments or high-value capital equipment, they are not just inventory items – they are critical components in patient care.
At the same time, logistics teams must navigate a growing list of challenges: regulatory scrutiny, fragile supply chains, unpredictable demand, cost pressure and the ever-present threat of counterfeiting or cybersecurity risks.
In this context, warehousing becomes more than a physical location. It is a regulated, high-stakes environment where traceability, temperature control and documentation accuracy must be guaranteed at every step. And all of this is happening under the watchful eye of the EU Medical Device Regulation (MDR) – a framework that’s redefining how logistics for medical devices must operate.