Nursing Home Supplies

Medical Supplies for Nursing Homes and Skilled Nursing Facilities

Medical supplies for nursing homes, long-term care, and skilled nursing facilities at manufacturer-direct pricing. No minimums, no distributor markup.

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Hand-picked by our team based on what nursing homes actually order every month.

Incontinence

Overnight briefs, pull-ups, booster pads, underpads, perineal wash, barrier cream, and wipes for residents across all acuity levels.

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Wound care and dressing

Foam dressings, hydrocolloids, gauze, ABD pads, calcium alginate, island dressings, medical tape, and wound ointment for pressure injury prevention and skin integrity.

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Medical supplies

Nitrile gloves, isolation gowns, surgical masks, face shields, catheter supplies, pill management, and mouth care for daily resident care and infection control.

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Mobility aids and equipment

Wheelchairs, walkers, rollators, transfer belts, hoyer lifts, and bed rails for safe resident mobility and repositioning.

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Medical furniture and equipment

Pressure-relief mattresses, overbed tables, and positioning aids for resident comfort and clinical support.

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Enhanced Barrier Precautions and PPE Usage in Nursing Homes

CDC guidance on Enhanced Barrier Precautions (EBP) has changed how much PPE nursing homes use daily. And it's not a small change.

What EBP is

EBP is an infection-control measure targeting multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs) in nursing homes. Research from the CDC shows that more than 50% of nursing home residents may carry MDROs without showing any symptoms. Staff often don't know a resident is colonized, which means they might skip gown and glove use during routine care. EBP closes that gap.

Under EBP, staff wear gowns and gloves during high-contact care activities for any resident who has a wound, an indwelling medical device (urinary catheter, feeding tube, central line), or known MDRO colonization. High-contact activities include dressing, bathing, toileting, transferring, repositioning, wound care, and linen changes.

What This Does to Your Supply Budget

Before EBP, most facilities only used gowns and gloves under full contact precautions, which applied to a small portion of the census. EBP covers a much larger group of residents during routine daily care. That means more gloves, more gowns, and faster reorder cycles than most facilities budgeted for.

CDC's implementation guidance also says PPE should be available at the point of care, outside or near each resident's room, not just at a supply cart down the hall. So the facility isn't just using more PPE. It's distributing it across the building differently, which makes tracking usage harder if the ordering system hasn't caught up.

Common questions about nursing home supplies

What supplies are nursing homes required to provide?

Under CMS regulations (42 CFR Part 483), nursing homes must provide all medical supplies needed for resident care. That includes incontinence products, wound dressings, PPE, catheter supplies, and personal hygiene items. The facility absorbs these costs as part of its operating budget.

What are enhanced barrier precautions?

EBP is a CDC infection control measure for nursing homes. Staff wear gowns and gloves during high-contact care activities (bathing, toileting, transferring, wound care) for residents with wounds, indwelling devices, or known MDRO colonization. Unlike contact precautions, EBP doesn't require room isolation or restrict the resident's activities.

What is F-tag 686?

F-686 is a CMS regulatory tag covering pressure ulcer prevention and treatment in nursing homes (42 CFR §483.25(b)). Facilities must prevent avoidable pressure injuries and provide proper treatment when they occur. Surveyors use F-686 to assess whether wound care practices meet professional standards. Foam dressings, hydrocolloids, barrier creams, and pressure-relief mattresses are all tied to F-686 compliance.

What's the difference between a nursing home and a skilled nursing facility?

In most contexts, the terms overlap. A skilled nursing facility (SNF) is specifically a Medicare-certified facility that provides skilled nursing and rehabilitation services. "Nursing home" is the broader term that covers both SNFs and long-term care facilities. Most buildings operate under both designations.

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