FAQ

Medical device sourcing questions and answers

Find practical answers about GetMedicalDevice, RFQ handling, supplier matching, supplier verification, brand and product pages, country-specific sourcing routes, documentation, and buyer responsibility.

RFQ-first workflowSupplier review supportBrand × product × country sourcing
Platform basics

General questions about GetMedicalDevice

Core answers for buyers, suppliers, distributors, importers, and procurement teams using GetMedicalDevice for medical device sourcing.

GetMedicalDevice is a B2B medical device sourcing and RFQ support platform that helps buyers move from product discovery to structured supplier communication.

The platform is built for hospitals, clinics, laboratories, distributors, importers, wholesalers, procurement departments, and international medical sourcing teams.

GetMedicalDevice primarily supports medical sourcing, supplier discovery, and RFQ communication. Unless clearly agreed otherwise, final product sales, invoices, delivery terms, and commercial commitments are handled by the relevant supplier or seller.

Medical buyers often search with commercial sourcing intent. They may know the brand, product family, reference code, category, destination country, or documentation requirement. The brand × product × country structure helps organize that intent into clearer procurement routes.

No. GetMedicalDevice is designed for professional B2B sourcing and procurement communication. It does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, treatment guidance, or clinical suitability decisions.

RFQ workflow

Questions about requesting a quote

Practical guidance for submitting structured medical sourcing requests through the RFQ workflow.

Yes. Buyers can submit a structured RFQ with product name, brand preference, category, REF/UPN code, quantity, destination country, company details, timeline, and documentation requirements.

Include the exact product name or family, brand, REF/UPN/model code, required quantity, destination country, acceptable alternatives, delivery expectations, documentation needs, company name, and business contact details.

No. Submitting an RFQ is only a request for sourcing or quotation support. A purchase contract exists only when the buyer and supplier separately agree on price, documentation, payment, delivery, warranty, and other commercial terms.

Yes. If alternatives are acceptable, mention compatible brands, equivalent models, acceptable size ranges, required specifications, and any non-negotiable clinical or procurement requirements.

No. Product availability, pricing, lead time, minimum order quantity, shipping options, documentation, and supplier terms may vary by supplier, country, stock status, and market conditions.

Catalog structure

Products, brands, categories, and countries

Answers about how GetMedicalDevice organizes medical sourcing pages for better buyer navigation and stronger procurement context.

Category organization helps buyers move from broad medical product intent to specific product families, brands, models, and supplier-ready RFQ requests.

Brand pages help buyers review medical product groups connected to a specific manufacturer, brand reference, or distributor route. They also support clearer sourcing intent when buyers search by brand name.

Country pages support destination-based sourcing context. Medical device availability, documentation, import expectations, and supplier routes can vary by destination market.

The platform uses clean canonical landing pages instead of uncontrolled query-string filters, duplicate archives, or doorway-style pages. This keeps the catalog structure cleaner for users and search engines.

Yes. New pages can be added when they provide unique sourcing intent, useful buyer information, clean structure, internal linking value, and commercial relevance.

Supplier trust

Supplier verification and supplier onboarding

Questions about supplier review, onboarding expectations, and buyer confidence.

GetMedicalDevice may support supplier review and sourcing route organization, but buyers should independently verify supplier legitimacy, documentation, commercial terms, and regulatory suitability before purchase.

Yes. Medical device manufacturers, authorized distributors, exporters, importers, wholesalers, brand representatives, and category specialists may request supplier onboarding by contacting the supplier team.

Supplier verification may take up to 6 months depending on documentation quality, company review, product scope, regional requirements, brand checks, and internal assessment capacity.

No. Submitting supplier information does not guarantee approval, listing, buyer access, RFQ routing, or platform visibility.

Suppliers are stronger candidates when they provide clear company details, product categories, brand relationships, documentation availability, export/import capability, country coverage, and reliable RFQ response quality.

Compliance and responsibility

Documentation, regulatory checks, and buyer responsibility

Important compliance-safe answers for buyers and suppliers using the platform.

No. GetMedicalDevice does not provide regulatory approval, product registration, import clearance, or legal compliance decisions for buyers or suppliers.

The buyer is responsible for verifying product suitability, regulatory approval, documentation, import rules, country registration requirements, and all applicable compliance obligations before purchasing or using any medical device.

Depending on the product and country, buyers may need certificates, declarations of conformity, IFU documents, technical sheets, quality documents, labeling details, registration information, and supplier authorization documents.

No. Brand names, product families, trademarks, and model references are used for sourcing identification and buyer request clarity only. Unless clearly stated, GetMedicalDevice is not officially endorsed by or affiliated with listed brand owners.

No. Clinical suitability, product use, regulatory acceptance, and procurement approval must be reviewed by the buyer and their qualified clinical, biomedical, regulatory, legal, and procurement teams.

Procurement next step

Still have a medical sourcing question?

Send a structured RFQ with product, brand, category, country, quantity, timing, and documentation details so the sourcing request can be reviewed more clearly.

Start RFQ
Your request has been captured successfully.