NASA gets things done.
006 ArchivesNational Aeronautics and Space Administration announced Thursday that, in just 37 days, it has successfully developed a prototype ventilator that can be used in the treatment of COVID-19 patients. The so-called VITAL — an acronym for Ventilator Intervention Technology Accessible Locally — still needs FDA approval, and is intended to free up more traditional ventilators for severe COVID-cases.
"We specialize in spacecraft, not medical-device manufacturing," NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory Director Michael Watkins explained in a press release. "But excellent engineering, rigorous testing and rapid prototyping are some of our specialties."
Notably, the VITAL device is not the slightly altered BiPAPs and CPAPs — more traditionally used to treat sleep apnea — donated by Elon Musk. It is designed to be used in an invasive manner, although it won't last as long as a more traditional ventilator.
"Like all ventilators, VITAL requires patients to be sedated and an oxygen tube inserted into their airway to breathe," explains NASA. "The new device wouldn't replace current hospital ventilators, which can last years and are built to address a broader range of medical issues. Instead, VITAL is intended to last three to four months and is specifically tailored for COVID-19 patients."
Notably, according to NASA, the VITAL was "designed to use parts currently available to potential manufacturers but not compete with the existing supply chain of currently made ventilators."
This is a crucial aspect of the design, as ventilator manufacturer Dräger explained to Mashable in March.
"New production lines would only generate additional output if the supply industry were also doubled," noted spokesperson Melanie Kamann, "which is impossible in the short term from the perspective of regulatory qualification."
By using non-traditional components, the NASA team appears to have found a way around this very real constraint.
SEE ALSO: Ventilator manufacturers aren't impressed by Elon Musk's offer
So what's next? Now that the ventilator is designed, the question is if and when it will go into production. The Office of Technology Transfer and Corporate Partnerships at Caltech is offering a free VITAL license, and is in the process of contacting the medical industry to see what companies are interested in manufacturing the device.
Hopefully a company bites.
Here's what the Ice Age tells us about future sea level riseWoman channels #ShePersisted spirit in rant against Mitch McConnellTwitter helps brands become more than faceless monoliths to their customersiPhone users spent an average of $40 on the App Store in 2016Blogger learns that it's never OK to talk down pizza'This Is Us' gives us a road trip we'll never forget in 'Memphis'Ford's selfAMD FSR 4 is Very Impressive: 1440p Upscaling TestedThe Atlanta Hawks Twitter account doesn't want to hear your trade suggestionsIndia's new currency problem: Fake Rs 2,000 bills at SBI ATMSouth Korean women will live longer than the rest of us in the futureHere's what the Ice Age tells us about future sea level riseNo, Samsung isn't launching a refurbished Galaxy Note7Texas to feral pigs: It's time for the 'hog apocalypse' to beginNo, Samsung isn't launching a refurbished Galaxy Note7A couple took 'breakup photos' and they're still pretty sad about the whole thingShe let her dog poop in the airport, so he got his revengeDon't challenge this 6The Chainsmokers and Coldplay release a boring song about being boringNASA discovered 7 Earth Sprint contractor leaks 261,000 phone bills and bank statements The 10 best films of 2019, from 'Avengers: Endgame' to 'Parasite' Samsung Galaxy S11 to have a 108 Head and neck injuries from cell phone use are rising, study finds Hillary Clinton tweets an empowering message to young girls everywhere Finally, a dating app for finding people as lazy as you are Uber drivers experienced sexual assault almost as often as riders, Uber's safety study shows These are 2019's most bizarre concept cars Barack Obama got a leather jacket because he is a fashion dad now Waymo's new iPhone app lets some users order self Internet sleuth tracks down stolen trailer in less than 15 minutes with Facebook post This sheep with its head stuck in a straw bale is our spirit animal Feds indict Russian group called 'Evil Corp' for $100 million in theft I can't stop watching these hectic lasso moments in the 'Wonder Woman 1984' trailer Report: Magic Leap wanted to sell 100,000 headsets. It sold 6,000. Pantone's 2020 Color of the Year carries more than one message Move over Libra, DAI stablecoin comes to Coinbase's debit Card René Auberjonois, Odo from 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine', has died Artist puts Trump's sexist quotes onto 1950s advertisements, and it works all too well Microsoft found 44 million accounts using breached passwords
3.5055s , 10138.09375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【2006 Archives】,Fresh Information Network