Skip to main content

Ventilators: Why are they used to treat coronavirus, how many do the NHS have and will we run out?

Ventilators: Why are they used to treat coronavirus, how many do the NHS have and will we run out?
NewsColony

Britain is in dire need of ventilators as it faces the growing coronavirus outbreak.

Engineers have been asked to draw up plans to quickly produce more ventilators in the UK, with Boris Johnson urging manufacturers to join a “national effort” to produce equipment for the NHS.

Ventilators are used to treat respiratory diseases such as Covid-19.

Download the new Independent Premium app

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

They work as an artificial set of lungs, providing oxygen to the body and removing carbon dioxide.

The UK currently has around 6,699 adult mechanical ventilators in the NHS, as well as a further 750 paediatric ventilators which can be re-purposed, NHS chief executive Sir Simon Stevens told the Health Select Committee chairman Jeremy Hunt on Tuesday.

There were also an estimated 691 in the private sector and 35 in the Ministry of Defence, bringing the total to 8,175, he said.

He added: “For some weeks now we have been out preparing and procuring our mechanical ventilators, and can see a line of sight over the next several weeks to another 3,799.”

Mr Hancock, the health secretary, told Sophy Ridge On Sunday: “We start with around 5,000 ventilators, we think we need many times more than that, and we are saying if you produce a ventilator then we will buy it.

“No number is too high.”

He added: “They are relatively complicated pieces of kit, I couldn’t make one, but they’re not so complicated that the advanced manufacturing that this country is so good at now can’t be able to turn its production lines over to.

“We’ve been talking to a whole host of companies about it and the prime minister is hosting a conference call today with them to say very clearly to the nation’s manufacturers, ventilators are the thing that we are going to need, and frankly, right across the world, the demand for them is incredibly high, so it is not possible to produce too many.

“So anybody who can should turn production and their engineering minds over to the production of ventilators.”

He added: “The thing the NHS needs now more than anything else is more ventilators.

“We’ve been buying as many as we can but we need to produce more too.”

Mr Hancock said he could not make guarantees that everyone who requires a ventilator will get one, saying: “We don’t make guarantees in healthcare.”

However, engineers have said they are sceptical about the government’s chances of “ramping up” production of ventilators.

Professor David Delpy, a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, said: “This proposal assumes that the NHS wants more of the latest spec ventilators with all the usual manufacturers’ guarantees and liability cover.

“Since modern ventilators are usually electronically controlled with a variety of built-in sensors, there may be supply chain limitations on how rapidly one can ramp up production.

“The previous generation of mechanical ventilators were relatively simpler, and components could be manufactured by many engineering companies with fairly standard machine tools.

“These are certainly adequate for all but the most complex ventilation support cases, but I suspect there are currently no UK manufacturers of these since there is no NHS market for them.”

A spokesman for health technology company, Philips, said it was “in the process of increasing our production for these critical products and solutions”.

He added: “We are actively engaging with the relevant stakeholders, including governments, health authorities such as the World Health Organisation, and healthcare providers to discuss their needs.

“At the same time, we are closely collaborating with our suppliers to get the supplies (materials, components etc.) that are needed for our increased production.”

Asked whether there was concern that the NHS had gone into the crisis without enough ventilators, the prime minister’s official spokesman said: “We are facing what is an unprecedented situation.

“That’s going to require an unprecedented response and that’s why the prime minister is urging industry to work with government. The response has been a positive one.”

Additional reporting by agencies

Source: The Independent UK | NewsColony

The post Ventilators: Why are they used to treat coronavirus, how many do the NHS have and will we run out? appeared first on NewsColony.



from WordPress https://ift.tt/2QjnG3t

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Volunteers book hotel room for homeless man with SingapoRediscovers vouchers

NewsColony Volunteers book hotel room for homeless man with SingapoRediscovers vouchers © The Independent Singapore Singapore — A group of volunteers from the Mummy Yummy Singapore welfare organisation donated their SingapoRediscovers Vouchers to book a hotel room for a homeless man. The man, who was identified as Jayden, did not have a place to live while waiting for the Housing Board (HDB) to allocate him a rental flat. In a Facebook post on Mummy Yummy Singapore’s page on Wednesday (Dec 16), the volunteers said: “We used our $100 Rediscover Singapore vouchers to redeem hotel stay for him and successfully booked 9 days worth of stay at 3 days per voucher.” They added that they were unable to book a longer stay because of higher hotel rates over Christmas and New Year. The volunteers hoped that they would be able to bridge Jayden’s stay until he got a flat. “Thanks our government for giving us these vouchers which in return we can put them to good use for people in need,” th...

Chinese stars moonlighting as live-streamers

NewsColony Chinese stars moonlighting as live-streamers Li JIaqi and Yang Mi joined forces to sell products online during coronavirus, blurring the boundaries between conventional celebrities and live streamers. Photo: @TrendingWeibo/Twitter The line between Chinese celebrities and live streamers continues to blur these days. Luxury brands are expanding their pool of friend-of-the-brand endorsements with top live streamers – Louis Vuitton, for example, tapped both actress Song Jia and “lipstick king” live streamer Li Jiaqi for its much anticipated 520 Chinese Valentine’s Day campaign. Celebrities, actors and singers are jumping on the bandwagon to test out their commercial values on e-commerce platforms, with Yang Mi, Li Xiaolu and Michelle Ye Xuan just a few of the screen stars moonlighting on live streaming portals including Taobao, TikTok and Red Book. So why are Chinese celebrities so eager to embrace the battlefield of live streaming e-commerce, and how are they getting on so...

Two hundred thousand Northern Beaches residents prepare for lockdown amid panic buying

NewsColony Two hundred thousand Northern Beaches residents prepare for lockdown amid panic buying Sydney’s Northern Beaches have entered  lockdown as the coronavirus cluster in the area grows to 41 cases. From 5pm on Saturday until midnight on Wednesday, the local government area will revert to lockdown orders issued across the state in March. People will only be permitted to leave their homes for five basic reasons: to seek medical care, exercise, grocery shop, work or for compassionate care reasons.  An additional 23 cases were recorded in the 24 hours to 8pm on Friday, including 10 already announced.    People line up to shop at a Woolworths supermarket in Avalon (pictured) on Saturday before the Northern Beaches goes into a lockdown at 5pm until midnight Wednesday  Two women (pictured) leave a Coles supermarket in Avalon before being required to follow stay-at-home guidelines  The toilet paper section of the Woolworths at...