What does the new regulation mean in practice?
The MDR increases patient safety and clarifies the expectations of the manufacturer and the product. It also clarifies who is responsible for what during use. The MDR entails a considerable tightening of the requirements for technical documentation, benefit-risk evaluation, clinical evaluation, and after-market monitoring.
Platform24 is one of the first health tech companies to receive an MDR certification for our products, which is Triage24 and Smart Care Plans.
Triage24 is a digital automated solution for care guidance and triage and the first triage solution on the European market to be certified. With Smart Care Plans, you can create dynamic and personalized monitoring and episodic care plans, with questionnaires, hardware measurements, appointments and more.
The CE marking means that the products meet the new, higher requirements for medical equipment and may be marketed in the EU. The certification also enables us to expand and develop the technical platform, which includes updates to the solutions and the addition of new functions.
The shift from MDD to MDR implies significantly stricter requirements for the product, including traceability, clinical evaluation, and post-market surveillance, as well as cybersecurity, usability, and expertise among the responsible individuals.
Stina Perdahl, Chief Medical Officer at Platform24, what has this meant for us as a company?
How does MDR affect healthcare providers?
Do you see any other interesting effects of the MDR certification?
“Yes. I think one interesting perspective is the requirement to look at the clinical benefit for the patients. To continuously monitor and evaluate the actual clinical data from the use of the medical device to create real value for patients using it. Another interesting perspective is the requirement for usability engineering, meaning creating user-friendly products for all patients to use. This is a very important aspect for equal care for all.” Stina Perdahl concludes.