MRI resource center
Use this page as the single starting point for mri procurement. The cards below keep equipment-specific buying guidance, RFQ documents, vendor comparisons, acceptance checks, maintenance planning, service-contract review, warranty review, calculators, related articles, and FAQs together.
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Buying Guide
Procurement advice for selecting MRI, including configuration, service risk, warranty, TCO, and evaluation points.
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RFQ Specification
Structured RFQ requirements for MRI, including mandatory specifications, accessories, training, warranty, and service.
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Vendor Comparisons
Compare vendor offers for MRI using technical compliance, clinical workflow, service, warranty, and TCO.
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Acceptance Checklist
Handover checks for delivered configuration, accessories, documentation, training, warranty, and baseline performance.
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Preventive Maintenance
Biomedical maintenance points for MRI, including PM ownership, service reports, spare parts, and first-year review.
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Service Contract Guidance
Review response times, spare parts, PM scope, exclusions, reporting, uptime expectations, and post-warranty support.
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Warranty Review
Check component coverage, exclusions, start date, labor, travel, software, accessories, consumables, and evidence required.
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Related Calculators
Open calculators connected to MRI planning, utilities, runtime, capacity, power, water, gas, or lifecycle estimates.
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Related Articles
Read equipment-specific articles and general procurement guidance relevant to MRI.
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FAQ
Practical biomedical engineering FAQs for MRI procurement, service, warranty, PM, and acceptance.
WHO procurement baseline
WHO medical-device procurement guidance is used here as the baseline: MRI should be selected against health service need, transparent technical requirements, lifecycle affordability, and the hospital's ability to install, operate, maintain, document, and safely retire the technology.
- Start with health service need, workload, users, facility readiness, maintenance capacity, and budget reality before naming a technology or preferred vendor.
- Write requirements so bidders can respond transparently against internationally accepted procurement practice: measurable clauses, documentary evidence, declared deviations, and comparable pricing.
- Evaluate value for money across the device lifecycle, not only purchase price. Include accessories, consumables, installation, training, maintenance, spare parts, downtime, and end-of-support risk.
- Plan equipment management before delivery: inventory record, acceptance baseline, safety/performance inspection, preventive maintenance, corrective maintenance, service reporting, and user training.
Overview
MRI procurement is a facility, safety, and workflow project as much as an imaging purchase. Magnet siting, shielding, quench planning, RF cage performance, cryogen or cooling requirements, patient flow, and emergency procedures must be reviewed early.
The technical evaluation should connect field strength, gradient performance, coil package, software applications, exam mix, and service support to actual clinical workload.
Clinical Applications
Neurology, spine, musculoskeletal, abdominal, pelvic, vascular, breast, or cardiac MRI depending on local service needs.
Non-ionizing cross-sectional imaging workflows requiring strong patient screening and controlled access.
Advanced applications only when staff training, coils, software, and reporting workflow are available.
Key Specifications
Use these fields as a starting point for the technical compliance sheet. Adapt final wording to local workload, site conditions, and procurement policy.
| Parameter | Specification Guidance | Procurement Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Field strength and magnet type | Define field strength, bore size, patient table capacity, siting constraints, and magnet technology. | Clinical capability, patient comfort, siting, and service requirements vary significantly. |
| Gradient system | Request gradient amplitude, slew rate, duty cycle, and cooling requirements. | Gradient performance affects demanding protocols but must be matched to real use. |
| Coil package | List required coils by anatomy and workflow, including warranty and replacement cost. | Insufficient coils limit service capability and damaged coils can be expensive. |
| MRI safety infrastructure | Specify access control, patient screening, ferromagnetic detection if required, emergency stop/quench workflow, and signage. | MRI safety depends on room design and procedures, not only scanner hardware. |
Installation Requirements
Confirm magnet delivery path, structural support, RF shielding, magnetic fringe field, quench pipe route, HVAC, chilled water or cooling, power quality, and equipment room needs.
Define MRI zones, access control, emergency procedures, fire response interface, and patient transfer route.
Require vendor site drawings and clear exclusions before contract award.
Procurement Considerations
Compare coil package, applications, workstation, injector compatibility, service coverage, cryogen/cooling requirements, and upgrade path.
Avoid buying advanced software bundles without confirming staffing, protocols, reporting capacity, and expected case volume.
Include RF cage, chiller, UPS, civil works, and project management in ownership planning.
Acceptance Testing Overview
Acceptance should confirm room completion, safety zoning, image quality baseline, coil inventory, protocol availability, network workflow, training, and emergency procedure handover.
RF shielding and environmental performance should be documented according to the project requirements.
Buying guide from a biomedical engineering perspective
A useful MRI specification begins with the service the hospital is trying to deliver, not with a manufacturer brochure. Biomedical engineering should translate clinical intent into measurable technical requirements, installation responsibilities, user training, service support, and lifecycle cost controls. Procurement should then require each vendor to respond against the same structure so the committee can compare evidence rather than sales language.
For imaging equipment, the strongest RFQs separate mandatory requirements from preferred and optional requirements. Mandatory requirements should protect essential function, safety, site compatibility, supportability, and operational continuity. Preferred requirements can be scored. Optional requirements should be priced separately so the committee can decide whether the added capability is worth the cost.
Total cost of ownership discussion
Total cost of ownership for MRI should include the main system, accessories, installation, commissioning, user training, biomedical training, consumables, software licenses, preventive maintenance, corrective maintenance, spare parts, downtime coverage, and end-of-life planning. The purchase price is only one part of the decision. In many hospital projects, the lower initial quote becomes more expensive when probes, batteries, sensors, software, service kits, or integration licenses are added later.
The committee should request a five-year ownership table from every bidder. That table should show recurring consumables, expected replacement parts, annual service cost, warranty exclusions, software support, and post-warranty pricing. If the vendor cannot provide credible lifecycle pricing, that uncertainty should be treated as a procurement risk rather than ignored.
Practical RFQ guidance
The RFQ should ask vendors to itemize the complete scope of supply. A clean response separates the base equipment, mandatory accessories, optional accessories, software, licenses, installation, commissioning, acceptance testing, training, preventive maintenance, service contract, and spare parts. This structure reduces ambiguity and makes bid comparison more defensible.
Biomedical engineering should include acceptance testing requirements before the purchase order is issued. The acceptance checklist should confirm delivered configuration, safety checks, performance checks, site readiness, accessories, manuals, training records, warranty start date, and service contact details. Final payment should be linked to successful handover rather than delivery alone.
Common mistakes to avoid
One common mistake is copying brand-specific wording into the specification. This can unintentionally restrict competition and weaken the technical evaluation. Another common mistake is accepting a demo configuration that is more advanced than the quoted configuration. The committee should confirm that the demonstrated model, software version, options, accessories, and licenses match the formal bid.
Hospitals also underestimate service dependency. If the equipment is clinically important, the evaluation should score local engineer availability, response time, spare parts pathway, service documentation, loaner policy, and escalation process. A technically attractive device can still be a poor procurement choice if the service model does not match the hospital's downtime tolerance.
Procurement committee advice
The committee should document why each major requirement exists. This helps defend the award recommendation and reduces disputes during clarification. Where a vendor proposes an alternative approach, the committee should evaluate whether the alternative meets the clinical and operational objective rather than rejecting or accepting it automatically.
For final ranking, use a weighted matrix that includes technical compliance, clinical workflow, site readiness, service support, warranty clarity, lifecycle cost, training, and implementation risk. A vendor-neutral decision is not the same as treating all offers as equal. It means the award is based on documented evidence and hospital requirements rather than brand preference.
Vendor Evaluation Checklist
Vendor evaluation checklist
- Complete site planning and magnet safety documentation provided.
- Coil package matches clinical workload.
- Service coverage includes magnet, coils, software, and emergency support.
- Installation exclusions and facility responsibilities are explicit.
Technical and lifecycle review
- Confirm the offered configuration matches the department workflow and site conditions.
- Review service response, spare parts availability, training scope, and documentation access.
- Separate capital price from accessories, consumables, software, licenses, installation, and post-warranty support.
- Require written acceptance testing and handover deliverables before final payment.
RFQ questions to include
- 1Provide an itemized scope of supply including main system, accessories, software, licenses, installation, commissioning, training, and consumables.
- 2State site preparation requirements and list all exclusions that must be provided by the hospital.
- 3Provide warranty coverage, preventive maintenance requirements, spare parts availability, and post-warranty service pricing.
- 4Describe acceptance testing method, documentation handover, user training, and biomedical engineering training.
RFQ Template
Use the RFQ template as the equipment-specific tender starting point. It should define mandatory technical clauses, priced options, accessories, consumables, installation scope, training, warranty, preventive maintenance, acceptance deliverables, and post-warranty service.
Vendor Comparisons
Compare vendors by delivered configuration, technical compliance, demonstration evidence, service readiness, warranty exclusions, spare-parts support, training, acceptance deliverables, and lifecycle cost.
Service Contract Guidance
Review magnet service capability, cryogen support if applicable, coil repair/replacement, remote diagnostics, and emergency response.
Confirm service exclusions related to RF cage, chiller, HVAC, power, and third-party accessories.
Plan downtime carefully because MRI service interruptions affect referral and scheduling capacity.
Warranty Review
Separate warranty terms for magnet, gradients, coils, table, console, workstation, software, RF cage, chiller, and accessories.
Clarify whether coil failures, software updates, helium-related issues, and travel/labor are covered.
Ask whether warranty includes image quality follow-up after major service interventions.
Maintenance Checklist
Use this during biomedical handover, PM planning, warranty review, and first-year service evaluation. Mark checks as completed while reviewing the vendor file.
MRI maintenance readiness
0 of 19 checks marked complete
MRI-specific PM and safety
WHO technical specification record
Asset record and risk level
User checks and cleaning
Preventive maintenance scope
Service reporting and escalation
Acceptance Checklist
Use this before clinical release and before final payment approval. The acceptance file should become the baseline for warranty and future PM.
MRI acceptance readiness
0 of 18 checks marked complete
MRI acceptance checks
WHO specification completeness
Delivery and configuration
Installation and safety
Performance and workflow
Training and handover
FAQs
Is MRI procurement mostly a radiology decision?
No. Radiology defines clinical need, but biomedical engineering, facilities, safety, IT, procurement, and administration must review siting, service, integration, and lifecycle cost.
Why are coils important in MRI evaluation?
Coils directly affect exam capability and workflow. Missing or poorly supported coils can prevent the hospital from performing intended studies.
What is the first procurement step for MRI?
Start by mapping the intended clinical use, patient volume, site conditions, user workflow, service capacity, and budget constraints for the MRI.
Which MRI specifications should be mandatory?
Mandatory specifications should be limited to requirements that are essential for safe operation, clinical workflow, site compatibility, service support, and lifecycle ownership.
What should procurement teams verify before issuing the RFQ?
They should verify clinical workload, site readiness, accessories, consumables, service coverage, warranty exclusions, training scope, and acceptance criteria before releasing the RFQ.
How should total cost of ownership be reviewed?
TCO should include purchase price, accessories, consumables, installation, licenses, preventive maintenance, corrective maintenance, spare parts, downtime, training, and post-warranty service.
What is the most common procurement mistake?
A common mistake is comparing base equipment price while excluding mandatory accessories, software, installation, user training, biomedical training, and recurring service cost.
Should optional features be made mandatory?
Optional features should only be mandatory when they are required for the hospital's actual clinical service. Otherwise they should be priced separately and scored as preferred options.
What warranty details should be separated?
The RFQ should separate warranty for the main unit, accessories, batteries, software, third-party components, consumables, and installation workmanship.
What should biomedical engineering ask during evaluation?
Biomedical engineering should ask about PM procedure, service tools, calibration needs, spare parts, response time, software support, service training, and documentation access.
How should acceptance testing be handled?
Acceptance testing should be written into the purchase requirements and completed before final handover. It should verify configuration, safety, performance, accessories, training, and documentation.
Why is local service capability important?
Local service capability affects downtime, spare parts access, escalation speed, user confidence, and the hospital's ability to maintain clinical capacity after installation.
What should be included in vendor training?
Training should include routine operation, safety checks, cleaning, alarm handling, first-line troubleshooting, escalation, and biomedical maintenance expectations.
How should accessories be specified?
Accessories should be listed by quantity, compatibility, warranty, replacement price, and whether they are included in the base offer or priced separately.
Should a demonstration be required?
A demonstration is useful when it tests real workflow, not only sales features. Users should evaluate setup, operation, alarms, cleaning, reporting, and failure recovery.
How should consumables be evaluated?
Consumables should be evaluated by annual usage, unit price, availability, compatibility, storage requirements, and whether alternatives are allowed.
What should be checked in the technical compliance sheet?
Every mandatory requirement should have a clear vendor response, supporting document reference, accepted deviation if any, and the cost impact of optional compliance.
How should post-warranty support be compared?
Post-warranty support should be compared using annual service price, parts pricing, PM inclusions, response time, uptime commitment, software support, and escalation terms.
What should be documented at handover?
Handover should include asset details, serial numbers, accepted configuration, test results, training records, manuals, warranty dates, PM schedule, and vendor contacts.
When should IT be involved?
IT should be involved whenever the equipment connects to the hospital network, exports data, uses remote support, stores patient information, or requires cybersecurity review.