| The naiveté being expressed in the comments here and as the premise behind the ventilator is astounding. I though I would share some information to put things in perspective: - If you are unwell enough to need a ventilator then the ventilator itself is going to the least of your worries. You will need the drugs and expertise to care for you. The current respiratory illnesses going around aren’t like polio and the iron lungs where all you need is help breathing. - If you can sort the above to have any hope of survival you need a “modern” ventilator that can operate in way that this simple homebrew device is physically not capable of offering. Most of the improvement in caring for people with ARDS is based upon careful and tight control of ventilatory parameters to prevent secondary lung injury. - Modern ventilators have a price tag of if you have to ask you can’t afford it. So in summary this is a nice build but serves no practical purpose. |
Particularly the “if you are unwell enough to need the vent, the vent is the least of Your worries.”
The vent keeps you oxygenating while we address the (usually multiple, overlapping and interacting) severe issues that led to you needing the vent. This is ICU-level care. A vent without an ICU doc and appropriate medications (and ideally a resp tech and a nurse) might as well be an origami crane.
Hospitals will run out of one those other things, on average, before they run out of vents.