There’s a dorm fridge in a lot of breakrooms that’s been there since 2014, holding whatever temperature the door-slamming and overcrowding allow. For somebody’s soda, that’s fine. The problem starts when staff insulin or a temperature-sensitive med ends up on the same shelf as the leftovers.
A consumer fridge doesn’t hold a tight range and doesn’t tell you when it drifts. A medical-grade unit maintains a narrow, monitored temperature band and logs it — which is the entire point when something on the shelf has a cold-chain requirement.
The price gap looks big until you weigh it against one spoiled vial of a critical med or one cold-chain incident. The cost of the right fridge is small next to the cost of the wrong one failing quietly.
At a minimum, get personal staff meds out of the lunch fridge entirely. If your unit stores anything clinical at all, the cooling needs to be rated and monitored for it — not borrowed from a dorm room.
For the full breakdown, read our hospital breakroom equipment guide — it goes deeper than we can here.