For Class 2 medical electronics, the manufacturing process is part of the regulated product: IPC-A-610 workmanship, lot-level traceability, and validated production lines are conditions of regulatory clearance and sustained field reliability, not optional disciplines. PCI designs and manufactures HealthTech electronics for OEMs across diagnostic, imaging, patient monitoring, and surgical applications, backed by ISO 13485 certification and engineering engaged from design through validated production.
Engineering Quality Into Medical Electronics
Medical electronics carry a risk profile that commercial hardware does not. A device that drifts in calibration or fails under sustained operating conditions creates a clinical risk, and that outcome is determined during design and manufacturing, not corrected after deployment.
PCI works with HealthTech OEMs at the stage where component selection, thermal strategy, and workmanship classification are still design decisions. Building quality in at that stage, then verifying it through functional and automated optical inspection (AOI) testing, produces a device that reaches and holds its specification across a clinical lifetime.
Manufacturing Calibrated to Medical Device Classification
HealthTech hardware spans a wide band of product types: infusion pumps and patient monitoring systems at the higher-criticality end, through in-vitro diagnostics (IVD) equipment, imaging systems, renal dialysis devices, dental instruments, and surgical ancillaries. Design and manufacturing requirements shift significantly across that range, and the process appropriate for one Class 2 device is not automatically the right one for another.
As an ISO 13485-certified electronics manufacturing services (EMS) provider, we adapt validated production lines, change control procedures, and traceability protocols to the regulatory classification of each programme. Where the device route is FDA (US Food and Drug Administration) 510(k) clearance, manufacturing documentation is structured to support a substantial equivalence submission from the outset, including the performance data and build records a predicate-based comparison requires.
Our HealthTech Manufacturing Capabilities
- Diagnostic and monitoring devices
- Imaging equipment
- Connected HealthTech
Our Expertise
PCI manufactures HealthTech electronics for OEMs worldwide, from design through validated production, across the full range of Class 2 medical device categories:
- Functional and AOI testing: board-level verification under real operating conditions, covering the test rigour Class 2 device manufacture requires beyond standard power-on functionality checks.
- Lot-level component traceability: critical components tracked at lot level throughout the build, supporting both internal quality processes and post-market surveillance requirements.
- Documented change control: change management aligned with regulatory expectations, keeping the build history clean from first-article inspection through production release.
- 510(k) pathway support: manufacturing documentation and quality records structured to support substantial equivalence submissions, aligned to periodic and post-market FDA audit requirements.
- High-mix, low-volume (HMLV) production: flexible manufacturing suited to the product-variant breadth typical of HealthTech programmes, without compromising quality discipline for volume flexibility.
Frequently Asked Questions About HealthTech Manufacturing
What is the difference between MedTech and HealthTech?
MedTech refers to regulated medical devices and diagnostics subject to formal classification pathways such as FDA 510(k) or CE marking. HealthTech is the broader category: it covers MedTech hardware alongside connected health platforms, wellness devices, and digital health tools that sit outside formal device classification.
What certifications does PCI hold for HealthTech manufacturing?
PCI holds ISO 13485 certification for medical device quality management, alongside ISO 9001, ISO 14001, ISO 45001, and ISO/IEC 27001. Manufacturing workmanship is held to IPC-A-610 Class 2 and Class 3 standards across applicable device classifications.