Scottish Daily Mail

Engineerin­g giants in race to produce 20,000 ventilator­s

- by Sam Greenhill and Francesca Washtell

UK firms are racing against time to design a new life-saving medical ventilator by next week – as the NHs warns it is 20,000 short.

Three consortia have been recruited to the ‘wartime’ effort to build the mechanical breathing aids, which are critical in the care of some people suffering coronaviru­s.

And cash from the foreign aid budget is now being used to tackle the shortage.

The Department for internatio­nal Developmen­t is working with frontier Technology and University College London to find designs for ventilator systems already used in developing countries that can be quickly adapted and built in the UK.

NHs chief sir simon stevens has admitted there are only 8,175 ventilator­s available out of the 30,000 that medical planners fear will be needed. if the imminent surge in cases happens too soon, there will not be enough to keep patients alive – meaning agonising decisions about which patients are not given them.

midlands-based firm meggitt – which produces oxygen mask systems for aircraft – is spearheadi­ng the aerospace consortium. The UK team at Japanese car maker Nissan is heading up the automotive group, and formula One manufactur­er mcLaren is running the motor sports consortium. The three groups have each been given until next week to produce a prototype.

There are also at least three UK ventilator manufactur­ers which are stepping up operations, but many of the key components they use are made in China or elsewhere in the far East.

A source involved in the ‘panic buying’ of equipment at one NHs hospital told the mail: ‘The doctors, who are ordinarily calm, are pretty agitated and giving us shopping lists of things they will need. it is massively stressful because it’s not going to be possible to get them all. it’s the medical equivalent of trying to find toilet roll in the shops.’ Boris Johnson wants to harness the skills of British industry and has asked 60 engineerin­g companies, including car giants, if they can adapt their production lines to make the vital parts in the UK instead of relying on imports. in a conference call on monday night, he urged them to find ways to make 30,000 new ventilator­s in just two weeks.

The UK’s only specialist maker of ventilator­s for intensive care units, Breas, in stratford-uponAvon, has increased capacity and moved to seven-day working.

The manufactur­ers associatio­n, make UK, says it would be possible for some specialist engineers to switch to making medical items. ford, Honda, car parts firm Unipart, digger maker JCB and rolls-royce are among companies looking into it.

JCB chairman Lord Bamford said: ‘We have been approached by the Prime minister to see if we can help with the production of ventilator­s. We will do whatever we can to help during the unpreceden­ted times our country is facing.’

Peter Worrallo, managing director of Penlon, one of the UK firms making ventilator­s, said: ‘Nobody from the Government has put in a purchase order yet. We are a British company and we want to help. We are getting ready. As soon as we get a categorica­l order, saying what is needed, we will be up and running.’

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