Critical care

Turn-key ICU — intensive care

ICU rooms with central monitoring, ventilators, medical gases and boom arms. HEPA cleanroom air available.

Typical timeline (12 rooms) 14–20 weeks
Ventilators per room 1 per room + 1 reserve unit per 5 rooms
Room air Up to HEPA cleanroom
Clinical connectivity HL7 + HIS integration
Why with Loumey

Four reasons that differentiate this service

  • 01

    Individual or open-plan rooms

    Configurations from 4 to 24 rooms. Individual isolation with positive or negative pressure as required.

  • 02

    Integrated central monitoring

    Central monitoring stations with simultaneous visualization of up to 32 patients. Tiered alarms and unified clinical history.

  • 03

    Boom arms for clinical flow

    Ceiling-mounted pendants with gases, power and data. Maximize patient access and minimize floor cabling.

  • 04

    Fleet-consistent equipment

    Ventilators, monitors and infusion pumps from the same manufacturer family to reduce human error and simplify training.

An ICU is not a collection of equipment

It is a clinical-operational system where every component — from airflow to monitor family — affects patient outcome and staff productivity. Loumey Medical designs the complete ICU, not piece-by-piece equipment.

Integrated components

  • Individual rooms with sanitary cabinet, antimicrobial HPL panels, optional polarized glass
  • Central monitoring: up to 32 simultaneous patients in one station, with replication to remote nursing station
  • Adult / pediatric / neonatal ventilators: consistent manufacturer family
  • Infusion pumps integrated into the medication administration system
  • Ceiling-mounted boom arms with medical gases, vacuum, power and data
  • Standardized crash carts across all areas
  • HVAC: positive pressure in general rooms, negative pressure in isolation, HEPA cleanroom-grade available
  • Digital integration: HL7 to HIS, EMR, pharmacy and laboratory systems
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

  • What ICU configuration do you suggest for a medium-complexity hospital?
    For 100–250 bed hospitals, we recommend a mixed ICU of 8–12 rooms with 1–2 isolation rooms (negative pressure) for infectious cases. Typical ratio is 1 ICU bed per 10 general hospital beds.
  • Can you upgrade an ICU without shutting down operations?
    Yes. We work in phases: divide the ICU into zones, equip a temporary continuity zone (can be a Tier 3 modular unit) and execute the upgrade in blocks. Detailed planning is done BIM-modeled to minimize any service interruption.
Next step

Ready to design your next clinical infrastructure?

Request a feasibility study. We will deliver a technical, budget and regulatory analysis at no cost, tailored to your tender or clinical need.