Welcome to the forum, Ian.

This
brochure makes interesting reading.
Note the stated requirements of (the present edition of) BS-7671.
My own "doubts" about the value of Supplementary Equipotential Bonding plugs and sockets in medical locations is that they are just something else for medical staff to worry about (misunderstand, whatever). And they have, by the way, been about in some hospitals for many years ... so I can attest to the "confusion" clause!
I also believe there may also sometimes be a level of confusion regarding the usefulness (or otherwise) of SEB (SBC, whatever) in medical rooms, and the related Equipotential "studs" often found on the back of portable and (or) mobile medical equipment.
This last category (the studs) may have some value in certain situations (cath lab, major surgery
etc.) where "daisy chaining" together the studs of many items of equipment to ensure that all equipment chassis sit at the same zero volts may be beneficial for various reasons (the main one being, of course, the electrical safety of the patient).
Meanwhile, I continue to uphold the view that the primary "safety feature" of Class I medical equipment is the protective ("earth") conductor in its mains power cable - and that safety (and a whole load of other Good Things) is ensured by a continuous programme of properly conducted preventive maintenance - by the biomeds. In fact it has always be thus! That's where the money needs to be spent; not on ever increasing layers of "smart" technology.
