IND-E care settings

Clinical Applications

Open the care setting that matches your purchasing workflow. Each section links typical Henry Schein product programs to the documentation and operating standards that buyers usually ask to review.

Dental Practices and Dental Service Organizations

Dental groups need chairside equipment, imaging, sterilization, restorative supplies, implant support, and infection-control products that can be standardized across locations without erasing local exceptions. A Henry Schein review can include dental chair packages, dental X-ray documentation, implant kit traceability, sterilization pouch use, service escalation notes, and replenishment rules for high-turnover items. Common review topics include UDI references, IFU access, training records, warranty routing, and substitution policy during supply constraints.

Community Clinics and Federally Qualified Health Centers

Clinics often balance dental, primary care, diagnostic, and infection-control requirements in a single purchasing workflow. The application package should focus on practical continuity: stocked gloves and masks, diagnostic test kit rotation, sterilization supplies, and durable equipment support. Procurement teams may request HIPAA-aware support records, lot management, OSHA bloodborne pathogen alignment, and documentation that can be reviewed by administrators who are not product specialists.

Reference and Hospital Laboratories

Laboratories need clear distinctions between IVD instruments, diagnostic consumables, sample handling products, and general laboratory supplies. Henry Schein program content should identify CLIA context, lot controls, IFU references, storage conditions, quality-control materials, and LIS or middleware notes where applicable. A laboratory buyer may also ask for reagent stability, temperature excursion workflow, replacement timelines, and documentation for audits by CAP, CLIA, or internal quality teams.

Ambulatory Surgical and Procedure Centers

Procedure centers are sensitive to downtime, sterile processing reliability, and par-level planning. Relevant programs may include surgical masks, nitrile gloves, sterilization pouches, disinfectant wipes, dental or oral surgery kits, and selected equipment support. The documentation pack should avoid broad safety promises and instead state product-specific evidence, storage assumptions, SAL context where relevant, and field escalation instructions when equipment service affects daily case flow.

Long-Term Care and Mobile Dental Programs

Mobile and long-term care teams need portable workflows with clear packaging, training, and replenishment rules. For dental outreach, infection-control supplies and compact equipment must be easy to identify, store, transport, and reorder. Buyers may compare caregiver instructions, cleaning protocols, product labeling, device identifiers, and customer support access. Documentation should be readable for non-specialist staff while still giving procurement the traceable records required for review.

Education, Training, and Simulation Labs

Dental schools and clinical training centers often use product programs differently than active treatment sites. They require durable teaching equipment, standardized consumables, controlled documentation, and training records that can be reused across cohorts. Henry Schein content for this setting can include demo unit planning, education bundles, infection-control orientation materials, maintenance intervals, and supervised student workflow notes that preserve compliance language without implying clinical outcome guarantees.

Match a product package to your care setting.

Send the setting, site count, and product families you are evaluating. The response can prioritize the documentation your committee needs first.

Review Catalog