1. JOB DETAILS Job Title: Medical Engineering Technician, Clinical Engineering Reports to: Team Leader Band: Band 4 Department: Medical Physics & Engineering Location St James Hospital/Leeds General Infirmary AfC Job No: 1373b 2. JOB PURPOSE/SUMMARY The Medical Physics & Engineering is responsible for the management of an extensive range of highly specialist medical equipment and related services throughout the Trust, community and private healthcare. These services are delivered by teams of technical officers and the incumbent is a member of one of these teams, responsible to its Team Leader. The technician will be expected to work closely and effectively with other technical and the clinical staff in the clinical areas for which the team is responsible, to ensure delivery of a high quality service. The post may be based at either St Jamess or the LGI. The medical equipment may include patient monitoring and life support equipment, surgical systems, anaesthesia systems, hospital beds, hoists, infusion devices, ultrasound, x-ray, renal, radiotherapy and medical laboratory equipment. The post holder works typically in a team, jointly responsible for the repair and maintenance of approximately 8,000 items of medical devices. All work is supervised in the areas of servicing, repair, calibration, storage and handling of expensive / complex medical equipment (values range between £1000 to £100,000 each). 3. PRINCIPAL DUTIES & AREAS OF RESPONSIBILITY Carries out supervised service, repair, safety checking, and calibration of diagnostic and therapeutic equipment for use in patient care Uses fault finding skills and judgement to diagnose faults in complex equipment for clinical use. Regularly carries out acceptance testing on new medical equipment. Provides basic support for specialist items such as intensive care and operating theatre equipment. Work is guided by departmental procedures, quality manual documents and national recommendations. Comments on changes to operational policies that may impact on own area. Travels to other hospitals, health centres and patients homes if necessary for the execution of work. Responsible for maintaining the equipment inventory database by recording own work and own measurements on medical equipment. Attends breakdown calls and undertakes preventative maintenance / calibration tasks as directed to meet clinical need, accessibility. Evaluates new equipment as part of equipment purchasing strategy. Carries out authorised modifications to medical equipment. Supports the construction of clinical devices as appropriate and under the direction of the Head of Clinical Engineering or designated deputy. 4. THE LEEDS WAY VALUES Our values are part of what make us different from other trusts, so we see this as a strength, as well as a responsibility. They have been developed by our staff and set out what they see as important to how we work. Our five values are: Patient-centred Collaborative Fair Accountable Empowered All our actions and endeavours will be guided and evaluated through these values Additionally, the following are core values which relate specifically to this post: Aware of the requirement for timeliness, safety, reliability and quality in all work carried out and ensures that high standard is maintained. Operates and adheres to the Departmental Quality Management system. The Trust has a statutory duty to involve patients and public in evaluating and planning services. All staff have a responsibility to listen to the views of patients and to contribute to service improvements based on patient feedback. The jobholder should respect patient confidentiality at all times and not divulge patient information unless sanctioned by the requirements of the role. 5. WEST YORKSHIRE ASSOCIATION OF ACUTE TRUSTS (WYAAT) Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust is part of the West Yorkshire Association of Acute Trusts (WYAAT), a collaborative of the NHS hospital trusts from across West Yorkshire and Harrogate working together to provide the best possible care for our patients. By bringing together the wide range of skills and expertise across West Yorkshire and Harrogate we are working differently, innovating and driving forward change to deliver the highest quality care. By working for Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust this is your opportunity to be a part of that change. WYAAT is the acute sector arm of the West Yorkshire and Harrogate Health and Care Partnership, one of the largest integrated care systems in the country. The Partnerships ambition is for everyone to have the best possible health and wellbeing, and the work of WYAAT, and each individual trust, supports that ambition. 6. INFECTION CONTROL The jobholder must comply at all times with the Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust Infection Control policies, in particular by practising Universal Infection Control Precautions. Hand hygiene must be performed before and after contact with patients and their environment. 7. HEALTH AND SAFETY / RISK MANAGEMENT All staff are responsible for working with their colleagues to maintain and improve the quality of services provided to our patients and other service users. This includes complying at all times with the Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust Policies, including Health and Safety policies, in particular by following agreed security and safer working procedures, and reporting incidents using the Trust Incident Reporting system 8. EQUALITY AND DIVERSITY The jobholder must comply with all policies and procedures designed to ensure equality of employment and that services are delivered in ways that meet the individual needs of patients and their families. No person whether they are staff, patient or visitor should receive less favourable treatment because of their gender, ethnic origin, age, disability, sexual orientation, religion etc. 9. TRAINING AND PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT CONTINUOUS PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT The jobholder must take responsibility in agreement with his/her line manager for his/her own personal development by ensuring that Continuous Professional Development remains a priority. The jobholder will undertake all mandatory training required for the role. 10. COMMUNICATION & WORKING RELATIONSHIPS Communicates with team members and other Clinical Engineering colleagues. Develop effective working relationships with clinical staff in the areas for which the team is responsible. Discusses complex equipment faults and technical issues with equipment manufacturers and suppliers, conveys technical information to non-technical staff e.g. nurse. Provides routine advice, basic user training and instruction on equipment both within the Trust and within community and private care areas. 11. SPECIAL WORKING CONDITIONS i) PHYSICAL EFFORT: Daily requirement for manual dexterity, accurate hand-eye co-ordination and use of precision tools / instruments in the repair delicate medical equipment. Move equipment weighing up to 15Kg, typically two or more times a week. Move equipment weighing 2 to 5 Kg several times a day. Occasional requirement to move heavy equipment from wall mountings for service / repair. ii) MENTAL EFFORT: Daily need to concentrate on fine detail during fault finding typically for periods of between 1 and 2 hours. Travels to other hospitals, health centres and patients homes if necessary for the execution of work iii) EMOTIONAL EFFORT: Working on patient connected equipment in areas such as accident and emergency and at ICU bedside often with distressed relatives present (typically 2-3 times per month). iv) WORKING CONDITIONS: Daily exposure to noise, solvents, dust, bodily excretions and blood. Daily work on powered electronic systems, often live and in awkward positions. Work on high-pressure gas systems/hydraulic system.