Medtronic will get out of the unprofitable ventilator market but – in a shift from its previous plan – has decided to stay in patient monitoring.
Change Of Plan: Medtronic Drops Ventilators, Keeps Monitoring, Forms New Unit
Medtronic will stop producing ventilators and combine the rest of its patient monitoring and respiratory interventions business into a new business called acute care and monitoring. The company had previously announced plans to divest all of the patient monitoring and respiratory intervention business.

More from Patient Monitoring
The US FDA has published final guidance to provide clarification for industry and agency staff on federal regulations of diagnostic X-ray equipment.
Altoida CEO Marc Jones spoke with Medtech Insight about the company’s investigational digital screening tool for Alzheimer’s and the dire need for better, more accessible precision neurology diagnostics as the global population ages, neurologist shortages worsen, and groundbreaking Alzheimer’s drugs change the treatment paradigm.
The US FDA is providing recommendations for sponsors conducting clinical trials outside traditional settings, such as individual homes, mobile research units, and remotely via telehealth participation. The agency says the guidance is part of an overall effort to advance how trials are designed and run.
Edwards Lifesciences’ Critical Care business “invented the hemodynamic monitoring category, and its solutions are currently used in more than 10,000 hospitals globally to better understand the cardiovascular condition in real-time for critically ill patients, which helps improve outcomes,” says BD, which sees synergies and new innovation opportunities across the groups’ data sets and platforms. Acquired for $4.2bn cash, Critical Care generated more than $900m in revenue in 2023.
More from Device Area
Vektor Medical is ramping up efforts to bring its vMap technology used to identify arrhythmia sources to more US hospitals, start enrollment in a multinational trial, and commercialize in Europe, pending the CE mark. Medtech Insight sat down with CEO Rob Krummen at LSI 2025 to discuss their plans.
Only 16% of venture capital general partners in Europe are women, and only 9% of those have actual investment power. Thena Capital is aiming to "redefine the image of a venture capitalist."
Exer Labs Inc.’s website marketed its AI-based Exer Scan app to “screen and treat Parkinson’s, TB, Cerebral Palsy and more.” But those claims went well beyond what was allowed under the product’s 510(k) clearance, US regulators say.