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Eight days ago we did not know what is. Now we know: if a ventilator puts a little too much pressure on a sick person’s lungs, they will be injured in their weakest hour and may die. The same is true of too much volume. You cannot easily blow too much air into a strong, conscious person’s lungs, but you can easily kill a weak, unconscious person on a ventilator by doing so. Patients in general need many forms of breathing assistance, such as simple supplemental oxygen. But COVID-19 patients sometimes have and require complete intensive ventilation for up to a week or more in an ICU. A machine to do that safely is MUCH harder to make than a machine that moves air periodically. This is why our team at have specifically emphasized testing, and proposed a that might give a clinician sufficient confidence to deploy an open source ventilator.Testing will be 90% of the effort in saving lives through open source ventilators.
That extreme risk and life-critical nature makes DIY, open source ventilator designs a solution of last resort. Let us emphasize that: LAST RESORT. When an open source ventilator is needed, if it is not fully tested, reliable, and easy-to-use by a clinician wearing personal protective equipment, we risk costing lives rather than saving them.
If you are a firm that can manufacture electromechanical devices:
1. Please see the University of Cambridge’s .If you are an engineer:
1. Do your homework.2. Offer to help an existing project.3. Focus on testing and reliability.If you feel called to design your own ventilator (and we do need more designs):
1. Do your homework.2. If you build something, publish the design fully with open licenses, even as you are developing it. If there is no published design, it is useless to the community.3. Plan to have others build your design as a test of your design documentation.4. Think in terms of manufacturing units on at the scale of hundreds or thousands or more. Assume that others will assist you financially in this if you publish a clear, well-tested design.If you are a donor:
1. Thank you! Buy equipment and supplies for teams that are open and have done their homework.If you are a medical professional:1. Be patient with the engineers, but educate them on risks and critical performance features. 2. Join a project and provide guidance.Help ALL of the community understand how to seriously address this crisis.
— Featured Image: Robert L. Read, PhD, Nariman Poushin, Keeshan Patel, Stacey Oliver Sarris and Andrea Ippolito