SVA is leding a collaborative effort to create a breathing assistance device to help patients suffering from moderate cases of COVID-19. As the world learns more about COVID-19, the response for how to provide care is evolving. There are three types of COVID-19 positive patients arriving at hospitals. On one extreme are patients who are marginally ill and only need oxygen. On the other extreme, there are those patients who are collapsing in respiratory distress. These patients require ventilators that pump air for the patient. In between these extremes is the group of patients who are not stable enough for wall oxygen, but do not need full ventilators. Reguvent helps this middle group of patients who need breathing assistance but do not need air to be physically pumped for them. Reguvent’s breathing assistance device enables the patient to take a full breath with minimal effort and it is available nationwide in large volumes now. The research shows that COVID-19 patients experience conditions similar to high altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE). This means that using high pressure ventilation injures critical patients. Reguvent is designed to avoid the injury that ventilators have been inflicting. Reguvent’s patent pending solution is immediately scalable and compatible with universal hospital designs. In essence, Reguvent’s breathing assistance device is an adapted scuba diving regulator. It connects the oxygen supply in each hospital room to standard hospital masks. This is how it works. First, the regulator pressure is reduced to match the level of hospital oxygen. Next, the trigger on the valve is set to a low setting. Then the hose is reconfigured to match the hospital specification. Finally, a 3D printed adapter is connected to a hospital mask. Once that is complete, the breathing assistance device is ready for use. Scuba gear is in abundant supply across the country and adapters can be easily 3D printed. By integrating with hospital oxygen and masks, manufacturing time is reduced, cost is reduced, and storage is minimal. This solution is only a matter of putting the pieces together that are in place. It is an immediate solution for an immediate problem. Reguvent’s solution is ideal for civil emergency planning. Scuba diving equipment can be donated from divers across the country in times of emergency and then returned or replaced when a pandemic has been resolved. In doing so, governments can increase response time in times of emergency. Sam KohlmannSVA Operations Manager
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