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As dialysis expertise involves a wide range of disciplines, a clash between the different working methods applied in the various specialist departments is something that is expressly desired. A dialysis machine incorporates knowledge from the fields of medicine, electronics, mechanics, physics, chemistry, physiology, production technology, process engineering and IT. Catering for regional specifics is an increasingly important aspect of development work.
“We can gain valuable findings by testing how application consultants from Germany, India or Australia handle newly developed devices like the dialysis machine 6008, for example.” In future, it will also be possible to optimise the operation of devices by means of virtual reality tests.
In the laboratories and test rooms in Schweinfurt, the devices are constantly available and placed nearer to the project teams than ever before. Software developers and mechanics work together closely, assisted by rapid prototyping, a process that allows new components to be produced on a 3D printer and immediately installed on the product and tested.
Interference from cell phones for instance, an increasingly common phenomenon in the mobile age, is simulated and analysed in the electromagnetic compatibility labs. And in the verification and test centres, modules and machines are subjected to long-term tests to ensure their long service life and durability.
Fresenius Medical Care operates over 40 production facilities, manufactures more than half of all dialysis machines in the world, and performs around 48 million dialysis treatments a year. Every patient has highly individual requirements in terms of their treatment. The Technology Center will be the central interface between customer preferences, user priorities, development and production – a cradle of innovation.