Polish
scientists design remote-controlled ventilator to fight
COVID-19
Send a link to a friend
[June 10, 2020]
WARSAW (Reuters) - A team of Polish
scientists has designed a remote-controlled ventilator they hope will
allow doctors to help critically ill patients breathe, but from a
distance, in a bid to make medical personnel safer during the
coronavirus pandemic.
|
If the experimental "RespiSave" ventilator can be shown to work
safely on humans, doctors can observe patients' vitals through an
application, monitoring their condition and adjusting the machine's
settings from anywhere in the hospital, the designers of the project
told Reuters.
Doctors would be notified if the ventilator gets disconnected or the
patient's condition changes drastically.
Respiratory failure requiring support with a mechanical ventilator
is common in patients with severe COVID-19, the disease caused by
the novel coronavirus.
The remote-control feature means the medical personnel can be in
less frequent contact with these patients, said Lukasz Szarpak, a
medical adviser on the project.
Health care workers caring for critically ill patients are at
particular risk of coronavirus infection, in some cases due to a
lack of adequate personal protective equipment.
The designers, who are among the first to come up with such a
device, said they expect use of medical telemetry to expand,
especially after the medical crisis associated with the coronavirus.
[to top of second column] |
Leszek Kowalik, the director of the project, said RespiSave will be
much less expensive than a typical ventilator, although he did not
specify the price of the device.
Many hospitals around the world faced a shortage of ventilators as
the coronavirus outbreak spread.
While the technology is still being tested, Szarpak and Kowalik said
they hoped it would be available in Poland within the next few
months and eventually on a wider global market.
(Reporting by Joanna Plucinska and Kacper Pempel; Editing by Nancy
Lapid and Mike Collett-White)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|