0
78/100 career outlook
Good news. AI barely touches the core of what you do. Your skills are in demand and that's not changing soon.
0% ai exposure+12.9% job growth
job growth
+12.9%
2024–2034
employed (2024)
68,000
people
annual openings
7,300
per year
ai exposure
0.0%
Anthropic index
how you compare
career outlook vs similar roles
1/2
the full picture
Your role is sitting in one of the safest positions right now. AI isn't automating diagnostic repair work, hands-on troubleshooting, or the physical work of disassembling and fixing equipment. The job is growing at 12.9% over the next decade, faster than average, because hospitals and clinics keep buying new devices and need people who understand them.
What makes you irreplaceable is the combination of skills no software can replace. You inspect and troubleshoot malfunctioning equipment using test instruments and manufacturer specs. You disassemble devices, identify what's broken, and physically repair or replace components. You perform preventive maintenance that keeps equipment running. You keep detailed records of all service work. You also catch safety hazards that could hurt patients or staff. This is hands-on, contextual work that requires judgment, experience, and accountability.
The demand for equipment repair is steady because medical devices are expensive, critical infrastructure. Hospitals need them fixed fast. As medical technology gets more complex, your expertise becomes more valuable, not less.
task breakdown
this is all you
8
tasks where you're irreplaceable
- Keep records of maintenance, repair, and required updates of equipment.
- Test or calibrate components or equipment, following manufacturers' manuals and troubleshooting techniques, using hand tools, power tools, or measuring devices.
- Perform preventive maintenance or service, such as cleaning, lubricating, or adjusting equipment.
- Inspect, test, or troubleshoot malfunctioning medical or related equipment, following manufacturers' specifications and using test and analysis instruments.
- Disassemble malfunctioning equipment and remove, repair, or replace defective parts, such as motors, clutches, or transformers.
- Examine medical equipment or facility's structural environment and check for proper use of equipment to protect patients and staff from electrical or mechanical hazards and to ensure compliance with safety regulations.
- Install medical equipment.
- Test, evaluate, and classify excess or in-use medical equipment and determine serviceability, condition, and disposition, in accordance with regulations.
ai speeds this up
0
tasks AI can assist with
no tasks in this category
ai handles this
0
tasks with high AI penetration
no tasks in this category