Full-Time

Lead Biomed Technician

Posted on 9/23/2025

Advocate Health Care

Advocate Health Care

10,001+ employees

Nonprofit health system delivering comprehensive care

Compensation Overview

$37.50 - $56.25/hr

+ Benefit premium pay + Shift pay + On-call pay + Incentive pay + Annual increases based on performance

Company Does Not Provide H1B Sponsorship

Downers Grove, IL, USA

In Person

Category
Electrical Engineering (3)
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Requirements
  • Associate's Degree in Electronics or related field.
  • Typically requires 5 years of experience in working on a wide diversity of medical equipment and systems.
  • Ability to work under the stressful environment created when clinical equipment users (physicians, nurses) mandate that their equipment be repaired in minimal time frames.
  • Ability to work with extremely high voltage and with complex electronic circuitry.
  • Exposure to blood borne pathogens, bodily fluids and air borne contaminants possible.
  • Ability to assume responsibility for on-call pager response and to report to work as assigned at multiple Advocate facilities.
  • Ability to lift up to 35 lbs. without assistance.
  • For lifts over 35 lbs. lifting equipment is expected to be used or lift with at least one other team member when available.
Responsibilities
  • Assigns scheduled and unscheduled work requests to BMET 1’s, BMET 2’s, and BMET 3’s. Verifies reported equipment problems with end users and makes determinations as to who is best capable of resolving the problem, assigning the work to an in-house service technician, a CE equipment specialist, or an outside equipment service vendor.
  • Analyzes, troubleshoots, repairs and services complex diagnostic and therapeutic medical devices using established electronic test and measurement equipment and techniques.
  • Assists outside vendors in their delivery of repair services, monitors completion of repairs, and audits their service report to ensure proper documentation and to verify charges.
  • Performs scheduled preventive maintenance and safety testing on clinical equipment items, devices and systems as assigned (owned, leased, or rented), using specialized test equipment, tools, simulation devices and phantoms. Documents all actions and test results according to department policy, using computerized maintenance management software programs.
  • Responsibilities may include work on a mix of Biomedical and Diagnostic Imaging equipment, but majority of work will be related to non-Imaging equipment.
  • Reviews the outcome of preventive maintenance actions and makes recommendations to department management staff concerning the need to make changes to the PM schedule frequency, procedures and/or data documentation forms.
  • Performs rounding throughout facility and interacts with clinical staff to proactively to ensure customer's needs are being met and address questions and safety issues.
  • Documents and maintains accurate records of all inspections, repairs, adjustments, etc. performed on all equipment by self or a vendor.
  • Assists with projects, as assigned, related to refurbishment, relocation or modification of medical equipment, devices, instruments, and systems.
  • Attends routine and special meetings when Site Supervisor is unable to attend, including the Safety Committee and the New Equipment Acquisition Committee if applicable.
  • Assists with all projects, as assigned, related to the acquisition, installation, refurbishment, or relocation of medical equipment, devices, instruments, and systems. Instructs BMET 3’s, BMET 2’s, BMET 1’s, and Electronic Technicians in the safe use, application, testing, preventive maintenance, and repair techniques on all types of clinical equipment technologies, devices, instruments, and systems.
  • Attends manufacturer or other technical service training schools and seminars, as assigned. Maintains current knowledge of the clinical application of equipment, devices, instruments, and systems so as to be able to ascertain whether or not such equipment is operating in a safe and effective manner.
  • Performs rounds in assigned areas to make assessments as to how the covered equipment is being utilized, and to answer any operational questions from equipment users. Keeps equipment users informed as to the status of repairs.
  • Responds to stat requests from equipment users to determine the extent of reported problems and makes the determination as to who is best capable of resolving the suspected problem, using in-house CE resources or outside vendor service sources. Assists with and/or delivers in-service education sessions to equipment users in assigned clinical units, all shifts.

Advocate Health Care is a faith-based nonprofit health system serving Illinois and Wisconsin, providing medical care through a network of doctors, hospitals, and clinics. It delivers care using current medical techniques and technology, coordinated through clinical integration, and supports patients with financial advocacy to manage hospital bills. It differentiates itself by its nonprofit, faith-based mission, focus on access for uninsured or underinsured, and emphasis on provider education and system-wide quality through clinical tools and CME. Its goal is to improve patient care and make healthcare accessible to everyone, regardless of financial status.

Company Size

10,001+

Company Stage

Late Stage VC

Total Funding

$18M

Headquarters

Oak Brook, Illinois

Founded

1976

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • South Side hospital investment expands access and replaces aging Trinity Hospital.
  • Drone delivery can accelerate prescriptions, specimens, and supply logistics.
  • Chicago health innovation pre-accelerator can source local pilots without acquisitions.

What critics are saying

  • Large capital projects face inflation, staffing shortages, and delayed patient volume.
  • Drone rollout exposes Advocate to weather failures, privacy concerns, and adoption friction.
  • AI deployments create vendor dependence and clinical disruption if validation slips.

What makes Advocate Health Care unique

  • Faith-based nonprofit Illinois leader with 10 hospitals and 6,300 physicians.
  • Combines inpatient, outpatient, and primary care across more than 400 sites.
  • Invests in smart hospitals, modular clinics, and clinical AI workflows.

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People at Advocate Health Care who can refer or advise you

Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

Life Insurance

Disability Insurance

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Paid Time Off programs

Family benefits such as adoption assistance and paid parental leave

Tuition Assistance

Student Loan Forgiveness

Educational Assistance Program

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

-15%

1 year growth

-15%

2 year growth

-15%
The Charlotte Observer
Mar 27th, 2026
Advocate Health heads to Charlotte skies for Atrium hospital drone deliveries.

Advocate Health heads to Charlotte skies for Atrium hospital drone deliveries. Updated March 27, 2026 9:39 AM Gift Article Charlotte-based Advocate Health is launching a drone delivery service for hospitals next year, the health care giant announced Thursday. The service will deliver prescriptions and health supplies to patients' homes. It will also help reduce turnaround time for lab results used in diagnosis and treatment, Advocate said. Advocate is the parent company of Atrium Health. Advocate claims this will be the country's largest drone system for hospitals in terms of deliveries. For the service, Advocate has contracted with Zipline, a South San Francisco-based drone company. Financial terms of the contract were not released in the announcement. Associated fees for drone delivery customers were not provided in the announcement, nor did Advocate say when it might begin the service next year. The rollout will start in Charlotte before expanding to Chicago and Milwaukee. Advocate plans to make a combined 100,000 deliveries per year across the three markets. Advocate also is exploring expansion opportunities in rural Georgia to bridge gaps in health care access. Advocate's drones will also transport specimens between hospitals in its markets, providing faster results for patients, according to Advocate. How Advocate drone delivery will work. Advocate's delivery service will start with an order such as a prescription, lab specimen or medical supply. Next, the drone will fly to a patient's yard or an Advocate facility. Upon arriving, the drone will remain up to 300 feet in the air while a pod, attached by a tether and carrying the product, descends to the ground. Precise deliveries will be made even in high winds and bad weather, according to Advocate. Drone delivery expands across the Charlotte region. Wing, a service owned by Google's parent company, Alphabet Inc., made its local debut last May at the Arboretum Shopping Center off Providence Road. Initially launched to fulfill DoorDash orders, the service has expanded to the Northcross Shopping Center in Huntersville. It was the region's first residential drone delivery provider. Following the DoorDash partnership, Walmart became the second major company to contract with Wing last June. The retail giant plans to launch its own drone operations in the University City area of Charlotte, based out of the Supercenter at 7735 N. Tryon St. More on Advocate Health. Advocate Health is the third-largest nonprofit health system in the United States, and Atrium Helath is the largest provider in the Charlotte region. Advocate Health serves 6 million patients across 69 hospitals and more than 1,000 care locations. The system continues to bolster its footprint in North Carolina. It recently partnered with Wake Forest University to launch Charlotte's first four-year medical school, the centerpiece of The Pearl innovation district. This story was originally published March 27, 2026 at 5:06 AM. March 12, 2026 5:16 AM March 20, 2026 5:17 AM The Charlotte Observer Chase Jordan is a business reporter for The Charlotte Observer, and has nearly a decade of experience covering news in North Carolina. Prior to joining the Observer, he was a growth and development reporter for the Wilmington StarNews. The Kansas City native is a graduate of Bethune-Cookman University.

Chicago Sun-Times
Mar 19th, 2026
Chicago Plan Commission gives first approvals to 340-unit apartment tower in Lincoln Park.

Chicago Plan Commission gives first approvals to 340-unit apartment tower in Lincoln Park. Honore Properties and Peerless Development want to build a $102 million, 28-story project at 1415 N. Dayton St. Mar 19, 2026, 1:00pm PDT The Chicago Plan Commission gave the first approval Thursday to a high-rise in an area of Lincoln Park that's gradually becoming more dense. Honore Properties and Peerless Development's $102 million project at 1415 N. Dayton St. would be 28 stories and bring 340 apartments to the southern edge of Lincoln Park, across from Goose Island and the Salt Shed. It's an area where taller buildings are being pitched, said Angela Spadoni, principal at bKL Architecture. The City Council has already approved a 37-story residential tower nearby at 1565 N. Clybourn Ave. There's also a 27-story condo building planned at 860 W. Blackhawk St. Spadoni, whose firm designed the Dayton Street project, said the intersection of Halsted Street and North Avenue is "very vibrant," and the abundant transportation options nearby makes it an ideal site for apartments. If the proposal is approved by the City Council, the developers will demolish the site's existing four buildings - 1415 N. Dayton St., 821 W. Eastman St., 811 W. Evergreen Ave. and 1415 N. Kingsbury St. - and make additional improvements to the surrounding street. The sidewalks along Dayton and Evergreen streets will be widened to 6 feet, and streetscaping will be added. Dayton Street's sidewalk is currently about 4 feet wide, making it too narrow for pedestrians. The building would include studios up to three-bedroom apartments, with 68 affordable units. The affordable units would be for those making 60% of the average area median income. In Chicago, that's $50,400 annually for an individual renter. Two amenity decks - with the rooftop deck including a pool - are planned. Commissioners also heard a presentation from Advocate Health Care for its new hospital at the old U.S. Steel South Works site. The 52-bed hospital will open as Advocate Trinity Hospital. The five-story hospital will include 36 surgery beds, four intensive car unit beds, eight observation beds, a four-bed dialysis unit and an emergency room with 16 bays. Once open, the hospital system will close its 205-bed hospital, Trinity, at 2320 E. 93rd St., which has been operating since 1895. That property will be demolished and become green space. The new hospital is part of Advocate's $1 billion investment to close Chicago's 30-year life expectancy gap between residents on the South and North sides. Based on community feedback, Advocate Trinity Hospital President Michelle Blakely said it added community gardens to its plans, along with respite spaces for families. "We're creating an absolute community, as opposed to simply a hospital," Blakely told commissioners. "We're bringing the community into the space by including respite spaces and walking trails and other things that become attractive to the way that the community engages with the hospital and helps us further our intention to create health and wellness." The commission also approved plans for a 66-unit residential building in the north end of Fulton Market. The building, at 1201 W. Kinzie St., is "a straightforward and smallish project for this part of the Fulton Market," said Scott Borstein, attorney at Neal & Leroy on behalf of the developer. Dirk Denison Architects Managing Director Justin DeGroff said the firm designed the building to look like three smaller buildings, featuring green brick and Juliet balconies - a unique design for the area. Ald. Walter "Red" Burnett (27th) praised the project, which he said bridges the two sides of Hubbard Street, where the south portion is the typical Fulton Market high-rises and north of Hubbard Street has more townhomes and residential development. "This is a nice in-between," Burnett said. Chicago Sun-TimesMoney reporter, development As part of a weekly audio segment, we want to help you tackle your personal finance questions. Keep Watching New owner of The Hideout plans to continue venue's legacy as a cultural institution and community hub New owner of The Hideout plans to continue venue's legacy as a cultural institution and community hub Next Up In News

Smart Cities World Ltd
Jan 14th, 2026
Charlotte seeks early-stage health innovation start-ups

Charlotte seeks early-stage health innovation start-ups. The programme aims to drive meaningful change in the Charlotte community and beyond The City of Charlotte is partnering with Advocate Health to launch gBETA Charlotte Health, the region's first health innovation pre-accelerator programme.

The Boldt Company
Jan 7th, 2026
Boldt Delivers Cost-Effective Health Care Facility

Boldt delivers cost-effective Health Care facility. Advocate Health Care partnered with The Boldt Company to deliver a new outpatient clinic in Hoffman Estates, Ill. Completed in just 12 months, the project used modular design and prefabrication to reduce costs by 32% and accelerate speed-to-market, creating a facility that expands access to care while staying under budget.

The Goldsboro News-Argus
Aug 21st, 2025
Dosher Hospital Foundation welcomes new board members

Lois Ingland recently retired from Advocate Health, the 3rd largest nonprofit healthcare system in the US, headquartered in Charlotte.

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