PCREE Testing Companies in North Carolina

Looking for PCREE testing in North Carolina? PCREETest.com connects skilled nursing facilities with certified biomedical technicians across North Carolina. Request a free quote and we'll match you with a vetted local vendor within 24 hours.

There are approximately 430 skilled nursing facilities in North Carolina, all required to comply with NFPA 99 and CMS Life Safety Code standards for patient care electrical equipment testing. 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 North Carolina, what credentials to verify, and how to avoid the most common mistakes SNF administrators make when sourcing testing services.

Who Regulates SNFs in North Carolina?

In North Carolina, skilled nursing facilities are licensed and surveyed by the North Carolina Division of Health Service Regulation (DHSR). NC DHSR performs annual unannounced surveys of all licensed SNFs and is known for rigorous Life Safety Code enforcement. North Carolina's growing population has driven significant SNF market expansion, particularly in the Charlotte and Triangle metros.

From a PCREE compliance perspective, keeping documentation current and organized matters year-round — not just before a survey. For state-specific regulatory context, see our North Carolina PCREE resource page.

What to Look for in a North Carolina PCREE Testing Company

Credentials First

NFPA 99 requires testing by "qualified personnel" with demonstrated competence. When evaluating vendors in North Carolina, verify the technician 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. If a surveyor challenges your testing vendor's qualifications, you need documentation in your file.

Calibrated Test Equipment

The electrical safety analyzer (ESA) used to test your devices must be calibrated and in-date — traceable to NIST standards per NFPA 99. A reputable vendor provides the calibration certificate automatically. If they don't, ask before scheduling.

Report Quality

Your test reports are your proof of compliance. Before hiring any vendor, ask for a sample. A proper PCREE test report includes:

  • Facility name, date, and technician name and credential
  • Each device tested with serial number, make/model, and location
  • Numeric results for ground resistance, chassis leakage, and patient lead leakage
  • Pass/fail notation per device
  • Corrective action list for any failures
  • Technician signature

A report showing only "pass" with no recorded values will not satisfy a thorough surveyor review.

Geographic Coverage in North Carolina

Biomedical testing vendors in North Carolina are most concentrated around Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro, Durham, and Winston-Salem. Rural facilities may face higher travel surcharges or longer scheduling lead times. When requesting quotes outside metro areas, ask specifically about travel fees and typical availability windows.

Some regional health systems in North Carolina contract their biomedical departments to service affiliated SNFs — worth exploring if your facility has an existing health system relationship.

Find a PCREE Testing Vendor in North Carolina

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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 label 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 scope or priced separately?

Prepare Your Facility Before the Vendor Arrives

Getting your documentation in order before a PCREE testing visit reduces gaps in your compliance record. Download our free PCREE Inspection Checklist PDF — it covers pre-inspection preparation, the tests themselves, and the post-visit sign-off that turns a vendor visit into a documented compliance record.

Need other medical equipment repair or calibration beyond PCREE? Visit our partner network for biomedical technicians covering all equipment types.

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