The bed didn't arrive. The pickup didn't happen. The invoice has a charge for equipment that was returned three weeks ago. Your nurse spent 45 minutes on the phone with the vendor trying to sort it out.
Each of these feels like a one-time problem. But if you've worked in hospice long enough, you know they aren't. They are the same problems, cycling through different patients, different weeks, different staff members who keep absorbing them.
Here's what those recurring DME vendor problems are actually costing you - and why they don't fix themselves.
When a patient passes, the family expects the equipment to leave quickly. A hospital bed in the living room after a loved one has died is not a neutral object. It is a daily reminder. Families who wait days or weeks for a pickup call their hospice. That call lands with your clinical team.
Beyond the family experience, delayed pickups carry financial exposure. If your billing system doesn't stop the per diem charge at the confirmed pickup date, you're paying for equipment that's no longer in active use. Across a census of 100 patients with regular turnover, late pickup billing errors add up to thousands of dollars per year.
The leading cause of delayed pickups is simple: the vendor didn't get a clear notification, or they got it and deprioritized it. Without a system that documents the notification and tracks the response, there's no accountability.
A nurse orders a hospital bed for a patient being discharged from a facility. The patient arrives home at 3 PM. The bed arrives at 9 PM. The family spent six hours managing a situation your team committed to handling.
Slow deliveries generate more calls to your clinical team than almost any other DME issue. The nurse who placed the order starts checking on it. The family calls. The on-call nurse gets involved. What should have been an invisible transaction becomes a care coordination problem.
The cost isn't just the family's frustration. It's your nursing team's time - time that comes out of patient visits and clinical documentation.
Every hospice finance team has opened a DME invoice and found a charge they didn't recognize. An item they're sure was returned. A rental that continued past a discharge date. A non-formulary charge for something that should be standard.
The problem with billing errors is that chasing them takes time your team doesn't have. Someone has to find the original order, cross-reference the delivery record, contact the vendor, and wait for a credit. That process typically takes two to four weeks per dispute.
Some errors get caught. Others don't - especially in high-census hospices where finance teams are reviewing hundreds of line items per month. The errors that go unchallenged are pure margin loss.
Your patient's order specified a low air loss mattress. The vendor delivered a standard foam mattress because the low air loss was out of stock. No one called. No one asked. The nurse found out at the next visit.
Substitutions without notice are a clinical problem, not just a logistics problem. Equipment that doesn't match the clinical order can put patients at risk. A wound care patient who needed pressure relief and got a standard mattress is a patient whose care plan wasn't followed.
When substitutions happen without communication, your team can't respond proactively. They find out when something goes wrong clinically.
Any vendor has a bad week. Equipment breaks down, drivers call out, demand spikes. A one-time failure is not a reason to change vendors.
The question is whether the same failure modes keep showing up - different patients, same problems. Late pickups that repeat. Delivery windows that slip routinely. Invoice disputes that require the same back-and-forth every month.
A pattern means the vendor's process is the problem, not an exception to it. And a process problem doesn't fix itself through phone calls and complaints. It requires either a structural change on the vendor's side or a structural change in how your hospice manages vendor accountability.
Most hospice DME vendor problems are predictable. They happen because the contract doesn't prevent them.
A well-written DME agreement includes:
If your current contract doesn't specify these things, you're relying on a vendor's goodwill instead of a documented standard. Goodwill is not consistent.
Not sure if your contract covers all of this? Download the Qualis DME Contract Renewal Guide.
One of the structural changes that addresses recurring vendor problems is working with a DME management company rather than contracting directly with vendors.
A management company sits between your hospice and the vendors. When a delivery is late, the management company's team follows up - not your nurse. When a substitution happens without notice, the management team addresses it with the vendor. When a billing error appears, the management team resolves it.
Qualis uses a quality improvement form for every documented service failure. If a vendor misses a delivery window, that event is logged and tracked. Vendors who accumulate service failures get addressed. Vendors who can't meet standards get replaced.
That accountability structure is what the contract alone can't provide. It requires an active management layer and a team that treats vendor performance as an ongoing process, not a one-time negotiation.
If your team is spending significant time managing vendor problems that should be invisible, that's a structural issue worth looking at. Start the conversation at qualis.com/contact-us.