According to their about page, they source medical equipment, but do not manufacture themselves, other than maybe custom branding, but that's probably outsourced to a printing company.
Long short is that this company buys huge amounts of products in bulk and the resells them in smaller quantities as needed. You need a warehouse to keep them in as you sell the supply. Multiple hospitals (and other facilities) probably place small orders every day. FedEx would make one pick up for all the shipments going out from this warehouse, which is why you see a small truck's worth of pallets waiting to be shipped.
TikTok boi is just trying to freak people out.
edit: I'll just add that FedEx has a huge supply/logistics network that doesn't require companies to place individual labels on each box. That's done by FedEx at sort facilities. FedEx picks up pallets from warehouses/manufacturers and then breaks them down and labels them as they move through the supply chain. Look up FedEx Supply Chain for more info.
Agree, the manufacturer may use Fedex as their drop ship virtual warehouse rather than warehouse them in their own building. Especially if the Fedex one is in a central location.
Worked in hospitals for many years and familiar with how they handle corpses. It use to be that the body was left in the bottom sheet and transported to the morgue with that alone and put in the fridge. The funeral home would come with their own heavy duty bag and transfer the body into that. Would like to hear from a current hospital employee but I'd bet all bodies now go into a disposable body bag to comply with COVID-19 guidelines, worker safety, etc.
Here's the link to the product page on ASP Medical's website:
https://www.aspmedical.com/products/cadaver-bags-kits/
According to their about page, they source medical equipment, but do not manufacture themselves, other than maybe custom branding, but that's probably outsourced to a printing company.
Long short is that this company buys huge amounts of products in bulk and the resells them in smaller quantities as needed. You need a warehouse to keep them in as you sell the supply. Multiple hospitals (and other facilities) probably place small orders every day. FedEx would make one pick up for all the shipments going out from this warehouse, which is why you see a small truck's worth of pallets waiting to be shipped.
TikTok boi is just trying to freak people out.
edit: I'll just add that FedEx has a huge supply/logistics network that doesn't require companies to place individual labels on each box. That's done by FedEx at sort facilities. FedEx picks up pallets from warehouses/manufacturers and then breaks them down and labels them as they move through the supply chain. Look up FedEx Supply Chain for more info.
Agree, the manufacturer may use Fedex as their drop ship virtual warehouse rather than warehouse them in their own building. Especially if the Fedex one is in a central location.
Worked in hospitals for many years and familiar with how they handle corpses. It use to be that the body was left in the bottom sheet and transported to the morgue with that alone and put in the fridge. The funeral home would come with their own heavy duty bag and transfer the body into that. Would like to hear from a current hospital employee but I'd bet all bodies now go into a disposable body bag to comply with COVID-19 guidelines, worker safety, etc.