Looking for PCREE testing in New Mexico? PCREETest.com connects skilled nursing facilities with certified biomedical technicians across New Mexico. Request a free quote and we'll match you with a vetted local vendor within 24 hours.
There are approximately ~70 skilled nursing facilities in New Mexico, all required to comply with NFPA 99 and CMS Life Safety Code standards for patient care electrical equipment. Finding a qualified testing vendor — one with the right credentials, reliable documentation, and experience with SNF surveys — is one of the more important vendor relationships your facility will manage.
This guide covers what to look for when hiring a PCREE testing company in New Mexico, what credentials to verify, and how to avoid the most common mistakes SNF administrators make when sourcing testing services.
Who Regulates SNFs in New Mexico?
In New Mexico, skilled nursing facilities are licensed and surveyed by New Mexico Department of Health — Health Facility Licensing and Certification Bureau (HFLCB). HFLCB conducts standard surveys and complaint investigations aligned with CMS Life Safety Code requirements.
New Mexico has approximately 70 skilled nursing facilities. HFLCB conducts CMS surveys. Albuquerque has the best biomedical vendor access. Remote areas of the state — including rural communities in the north and southeast — may require vendors to travel significant distances. Plan 4–6 weeks ahead.
What to Look for in a New Mexico PCREE Testing Company
Credentials First
NFPA 99 requires that testing be performed by "qualified personnel" with demonstrated competence. When evaluating vendors in New Mexico, verify that the technician performing the work holds one of the following:
- CBET (Certified Biomedical Equipment Technician) — credentialed through AAMI, the most widely recognized qualification for SNF PCREE work
- RBET (Registered Biomedical Equipment Technician)
- CLES (Certified Leakage Current Electrical Safety) technician
- Licensed clinical engineer or Certified Healthcare Technology Manager (CHTM)
Ask the vendor to confirm in writing which credential their technician holds and request a copy of the certification if needed. If a surveyor challenges the qualifications of your testing vendor, you want documentation in your file.
Calibrated Test Equipment
The electrical safety analyzer (ESA) used to test your equipment must be calibrated and in-date — traceable to NIST standards. This is an NFPA 99 requirement and a citation risk if the calibration certificate is expired. A reputable vendor will provide this documentation automatically; if they don't offer it, ask.
Report Quality
Your test reports are your documentation of compliance. Before hiring any vendor, ask for a sample report. A proper PCREE test report should include:
- Facility name, date, and technician name/credentials
- Each device tested with serial number, make/model, and location
- Recorded results for all tests (ground resistance, chassis leakage, patient lead leakage)
- Pass/fail notation for each device
- Corrective action list for failures
- Technician signature
A report that lists only "pass" with no numeric values is not sufficient for survey documentation.
Geographic Coverage in New Mexico
Biomedical testing vendors in New Mexico tend to concentrate around the major metropolitan areas — Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Las Cruces, Rio Rancho. Facilities in Farmington, Roswell, Clovis, or other remote areas should confirm vendor coverage well in advance of testing windows.
Find a PCREE Testing Vendor in New Mexico
Tell us about your facility — size, location, device count — and we'll connect you with a certified biomedical technician in New Mexico. Free, no obligation.
Request a Free Quote →Questions to Ask Before Signing a Contract
- What credential does the technician performing the test hold?
- Is your test equipment calibrated? Can you provide the current calibration certificate?
- What testing standard do you follow — NFPA 99 (2021)?
- What does the written report look like? Can I see a sample?
- Do you tag equipment with inspection date stickers after testing?
- How quickly can you schedule if I have a survey coming up?
- What happens if a device fails — do you provide re-test documentation?
- Are receptacles included in the scope, or priced separately?
Prepare Your Facility Before the Vendor Arrives
Getting your facility-side documentation in order before a PCREE testing visit saves time and reduces the risk of gaps in your compliance record. Download our free PCREE Inspection Checklist PDF — it covers the full pre-inspection preparation process, the tests themselves, and the post-visit sign-off steps that turn a vendor visit into a documented compliance record.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I find a qualified PCREE testing company in New Mexico?
PCREE Test connects New Mexico skilled nursing facilities with pre-vetted certified biomedical technicians. Submit your service request and receive a free quote within 24 hours. Our network includes CBET-credentialed technicians experienced with HFLCB and CMS Life Safety survey documentation requirements.
What does HFLCB expect for PCREE testing documentation?
New Mexico Department of Health — Health Facility Licensing and Certification Bureau (HFLCB) conducts Life Safety surveys in coordination with CMS and expects device-level written reports: each device tested, specific electrical measurements, pass/fail results, test date, and technician credentials.
Is PCREE testing required for all New Mexico skilled nursing facilities?
Yes. All CMS-certified SNFs in New Mexico must comply with NFPA 99 electrical equipment testing requirements, enforced through CMS and HFLCB survey processes.
How much does PCREE testing cost for a New Mexico nursing home?
Cost varies by facility size, equipment count, and region. Submit a quote request through PCREE Test for a free estimate from a local New Mexico technician. There is no cost to request a quote.