1-800-301-7989
sales@shipcritical.com

Category: Blog

Intravenous drip or Perfusion recipient administrated in a hospital room

Relocating a Medical Plant or Office

It’s daunting enough to think about making a personal move– packing up more objects than you ever thought you’d had into organized boxes, perhaps hiring movers to assist with heavy furniture, cleaning, etc. Having to move an entire plant or office multiplies that daunting feeling by a thousand. Our top medical shipping company is here…
Read more

Blue truck on highway

Differences Between LTL and FTL Shipping

At ShipCritical, we offer both the service of LTL, or, less than truckload, shipping, and FTL, full truckload shipping. Full truckload move full 48- or 53-foot containers, generally carrying one product for one customer. Less than truckload, on the other hand, can move from different customers in the same load. That is, if you don’t…
Read more

Driverless Car (autonomous vehicle) Image Illustration, vector

What Might Self-Driving Cars Mean for Medical Shipping?

Right now, Google Inc. is working on self-driving cars and looking to integrate them into the public, the concept and actualization may have a profound effect on the shipping industry. Indeed, the shipping industry might be one of the training grounds for self-driving trucks. Testing an automated vehicle in a place with relatively few people,…
Read more

Husky sled dog in snow

From Animals to Machines in the Shipping Industry

Mail of all kinds used to be delivered by animals of various geographies, long before trains. In Australia, for instance, camels were used to carry bundles until around 1930, when the railroad came. Dogs, now most known as beloved pets, also used to carry parcel and package across great distances by sled. Dogsled happened especially…
Read more

Blood Donors Making Donation In Hospital

A Brief History of Blood Transfusions and Donation

Once something is discovered in the scientific world, we often forget there was a time when that knowledge wasn’t part of the way we make sense of things. In the same century that Galileo discovered the earth revolves around the sun (rather than everything orbiting the earth), a British man named William Harvey realized how…
Read more