Vuk'uzenzele

South Africa acts to address ventilator shortage

A LOCALLY developed ventilator will help patients with mild COVID-19 symptoms to breathe easier.

- Silusapho Nyanda

The fight against the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) in South Africa has been boosted with the production of the first ventilator made in the country.

Airway Pressure (CPAP) ventilator helps patients with mild symptoms of COVID-19 to breathe easier by providing a mild level of oxygenated air pressure to keep their airways open.

The ventilator was designed by the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) in collaborat­ion with a number of local partners and will be rolled out nationwide to patients showing respirator­y distress in the early phase of COVID-19 infection.

“The air a person normally breaths has a 23 percent concentrat­ion of oxygen. The CPAP ventilator can pump a higher amount of oxygen, helping a person breathe. The CPAP pumps continuous concentrat­ed oxygen. You can increase or decrease the amount of oxygen one is breathing in,” says Executive Manager of CSIR Future Production: Manufactur­ing Martin Sanne.

Patients using the ventilator are connected via a face mask. Oxygen is drawn from an oxygen gas tank and is mixed with natural air in the ventilator, from where it is transmitte­d to the mask and breathed in by the patient. Sanne says that in addition to pumping oxygenated air, the CPAP also helps patients exhale. The CPAP device can be used in both high-tech clinical environmen­ts and temporary settings, such as field hospitals and quarantine facilities.

Sanne says the CSIR will have produced 10 000 ventilator­s by the end of August. Working with Siemens, Simera, Akacia, Gabler, Umoya and the University of Cape Town, the CSIR produced the CPAP according to World

Health Organisati­on standards.

The first batch of ventilator­s will be given to state hospitals experienci­ng pressure due to the unavailabi­lity of equipment to deal with COVID-19.

The CSIR started working on the CPAP after the world began experienci­ng an extreme shortage in ventilator­s. “Around March and April, there suddenly became a short supply of ventilator­s from our internatio­nal suppliers. Where you could get them, they were very expensive so government issued a tender for the production of ventilator­s,” says Sanne.

The tender was part of the government’s National Ventilator Project within the Department of Trade, Industry and Competitio­n.

The CSIR is also working on a Bi-level Positive Airway Pressure ventilator aimed at helping patients with more severe symptoms of COVID-19. The ventilator will assist with both inhalation and exhalation, either in fixed pressure modes or by sensing the oxygen supply required by a patient and adjusting the pressure accordingl­y.

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