Healthcare industry groups and analysts are reeling after President Donald Trump unveiled a sweeping tariff policy on Wednesday that could impact global supply chains for everything from needles and catheters to diagnostic tests and glucose sensors.

The policy adjustments include a universal baseline tariff of 10% effective April 5, and higher individual tariffs on some U.S. trading partners effective April 9. More levies, including pharmaceutical tariffs, could follow, the president said Wednesday.

The import taxes are set to impact a broad array of materials necessary for healthcare delivery, said Kevin Holloran, senior director and sector leader of the not-for-profit healthcare group at Fitch Ratings. Prices could rise for medical instruments, including syringes and diagnostic tools, and equipment, such as X-ray machines and personal protective equipment.

The inclusion of medical devices in the Trump tariffs stands “in stark contrast to the historical pattern of strategic exemptions of lifesaving and life-sustaining devices,”  Morningstar analyst Debbie Wang wrote in a note published Thursday.

Meanwhile, Jefferies analysts said companies that make life science instruments and diagnostics will struggle to find safe havens for relocating manufacturing given the widespread nature of the tariffs, adding that companies with existing Mexico or Canada capacity are better off given the lack of new levies on those countries.

“If costs on these products [go] up, so do either fixed or variable expenses,” Fitch’s Holloran wrote over email. “Without the ability to pass these expenses along to the end user (due to being contractually locked in with most payers for a period of years), hospitals will see operating income levels drop commensurately without other cost savings yet to be determined, or other revenue sources yet to [be] initiated.”

The push for exemptions

The American Hospital Association, the nation’s largest provider lobbying group, unsuccessfully lobbied the Trump administration for months ahead of Wednesday’s announcement in efforts to secure carve-outs for medical supplies, arguing that many hospital supply chains could not easily be reshored. The AHA said that tariffs threatened the nation’s supply of “life-saving medications and supplies.”

On Thursday, the organization reiterated its call for exemptions, following requests from AdvaMed, one of the medical device industry’s largest trade groups, a day prior to exempt medtech companies from the tariffs. 

The AHA shares the administration’s goal of strengthening the domestic supply chain; however, that goal needed to be balanced against avoiding disruptions to patient care, said Akin Demehin, vice president of quality and patient safety policy for the AHA.

“We appreciate that the Administration has exempted pharmaceuticals from reciprocal tariffs. At the same time, we recommend that the Administration consider tariff exemptions for medical devices,” Demehin said. “It is especially critical to have exceptions for medical products already in shortage and for which production in countries subject to the increased tariffs supply a significant part of the U.S. market.”

Renton, Washington-based Providence said the tariffs could cost the health system between $10 million and $25 million per year. CEO Erik Wexler urged the Trump administration to consider the AHA’s pleas for exemptions, noting that the healthcare supply chain is “fragile.”


“It is difficult to make critical decisions when it feels like every day could be different as we continue to go down these largely unchartered waters about the impact and implications for these tariffs.”

Mary Mayhew

President and CEO, Florida Hospital Association


We saw this during the pandemic when masks, ventilators and other products were in dangerously short supply. More recently, the destruction of the Baxter facilities during last year’s hurricanes resulted in significant shortages of critical IV fluids,” Wexler said.

The executive added that the tariffs come amid concerns about potential cuts to Medicaid, warning the cumulative impact could “cripple” health systems and create a national emergency for care access. 

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