Keep stock decisions separate from fridge service
If a medical fridge has drifted or alarmed, follow the site's cold-chain procedure for stock handling. ClubCold's role is refrigeration fault diagnosis, service and calibration support, not clinical stock-use decisions.
What makes the repair call useful
Have current, minimum and maximum temperatures, alarm photos, logger status, model details, power history and whether the fridge recovered after the alarm.
Common service paths
Medical fridge faults can involve sensors, controls, airflow, seals, door use, condenser load, calibration drift, power issues or refrigeration components. The call should preserve the fault pattern.
Keep vaccine stock decisions separate
For vaccine storage, use +2C to +8C and Strive for 5 as practical references. Do not assume compliance or stock viability from a single temperature reading.
Cold-chain questions
Does ClubCold repair medical fridges?
Yes. ClubCold supports medical, vaccine and cold-chain refrigeration faults for pharmacies, clinics, healthcare sites and labs.
Can ClubCold decide if stock is still usable?
No. ClubCold can service and assess the fridge. Stock-use decisions should follow the site's clinical cold-chain procedure and relevant advice.
What should I record before calling?
Record current, minimum and maximum temperatures, alarm details, logger data, fridge model, power events and whether the fridge has recovered.
Can repair and calibration be handled together?
Sometimes. The service path depends on the fault, fridge type, calibration status and site requirements.
Is +2C to +8C relevant?
Yes. For vaccine storage, Australian cold-chain guidance centres on +2C to +8C with monitoring and response procedures.
Is this for domestic fridges used in clinics?
ClubCold supports suitable commercial and medical cold-chain equipment. Domestic fridge use for vaccine storage should be checked against site guidance.