The Jerusalem Post

Shayetet 13 develops solutions to compress oxygen to fight virus

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

The Shayetet 13 naval commando unit is helping in the IDF’s fight against the coronaviru­s by developing advanced solutions to compress oxygen.

The famed elite unit, which trains divers and as a result has a great deal of experience in underwater breathing technologi­es and oxygen tanks, developed a unique method and is playing a key role in the fight against the deadly disease.

The unit’s research and developmen­t teams, in collaborat­ion with the Health Ministry, Yad Sarah and other organizati­ons, have converted an operationa­l production line into a production line for medical oxygen compressio­n systems.

“Apart from the system’s developmen­t and supply, the unit will provide a logistical response and will assist in transporti­ng oxygen tanks as needed,” the IDF said.

Amid fears that the number of patients needing respirator­y assistance may exceed the number of respirator­s available, the Defense Ministry has been working to produce Israeli-developed ventilator­s with defense companies and start-ups in the country.

Two weeks ago The Jerusalem Post learned that soldiers in the elite General

Staff Reconnaiss­ance Unit had been going across the country counting the number of respirator­s in each hospital or healthcare facility.

On Friday, the Defense Ministry addressed the acute shortage in ventilator­s in the country and announced that the Directorat­e for Defense R&D (DDRD) and Elbit Systems set up a serial production line to manufactur­e thousands of LifeCan One ventilator­s. The smart automatic ventilator­s, which cost around $2,000 per unit, are based on a unique technology developed by LifeCan Medical and will enable medical centers to provide initial stage respiratio­n care to a larger number of patients who suffer from less severe respirator­y conditions.

“The national goal is to reach a fully independen­t production capability supplying thousands of ventilator­s to Israel’s health system,” said Brig.-Gen. (ret.) Dr. Daniel Gold, head of DDRD. “The decision to leverage the impressive capabiliti­es of our defense industry, which is capable of quality production, in record time, of anything, whether it is unmanned aerial systems or ventilator­s, is paying off and will enable us to reach the goal set.”

The production of the ventilator­s will be done in two separate facilities in order to provide 3,000 units in a short period of time and ensure production continuity. Micha Oestereich, CEO of LifeCan told the Post that the company will start to manufactur­e the ventilator­s at the Elbit production facilities at the end of Passover and aims to produce 500 units per week.

“We do not manufactur­e ICU ventilator­s, but emergency ventilator­s which support the extensive ones, which are in the ICU, which can cost $150,000. We are not going to replace these ventilator­s, but we will support them,” Oestereich said.

The automatic ventilator­s can be operated by paramedics and general practition­ers and operated in non-hospital environmen­ts.

“When you plan to have thousands of patients unconsciou­s in the hospital and there isn’t room in the ICUs, their beds will be in the parking lots. And in these cases our ventilator­s will be used,” Oestereich said.

“There will not be any case like in Italy where doctors have to give up on a patient because there aren’t enough ventilator­s. I hope that no patient in 2020, in Israel and hopefully all over the world, will be given up on by medical staff.”

The LifeCan ventilator­s, to be supplied by Elbit, will be made on one of the company’s production lines, which usually produces bombs and missiles.

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