The Oklahoman

Czech volunteers develop ventilator

- By Karel Janicek

PRAGUE—Tom as Ka pl er knew nothing about ventilator­s — he's an online business consultant, not an engineer or a medical technician.

But when he saw that shortage soft he vital machines had imperiled critically ill COVID- 1 9 patients in northern Italy, he was moved to action.

“It was a disturbing feeling for me that because of a lack of equipment t he doctors had to decide whether a person gets a chance to live,” Kapler said. “That seemed so horrific to me that it was an impulse to do something.”

And so he did. “I just said to myself: `Can we simply make the ventilator­s?'” he said.

Working around the clock, he brought together a team of 30 Czechs to develop a fully functional ventilator — Corovent. And they did it in a matter of days.

Kap le risa member of an informal group of volunteers formed by IT companies and experts who offered to help the state fight the pandemic. The virus struck here slightly later than in western Europe but the number of infected was rising and time was running out.

“It seemed that on the turn of March and April, we might be in the same situation as Italy,” Kapler said.

Ventilator­s had become a precious commodity. Their price was skyrocketi­ng and so was demand that the traditiona­l makers were unable to immediatel­y meet.

Components for the ventilator­s were also in critically short supply. So Kapler said he set out to “make a ventilator from the parts that are used in common machines.”

A crowd-funding campaign ensured the necessary finances in just hours.

Ka pl er approached Karel Roubik, professor of Biomedical Engineerin­g at t he Czech Technical University for help. He, in turn, assembled colleagues through Skype, while his post-graduate student tested the new design in their lab in Kladno, west of Prague. They had a working prototype in five days, something that would normally take a year.

Roubik said their simple design makes the machine reliable, inexpensiv­e, and easy to operate and mass produce.

A group of volunteer pilots flew their planes to deliver anything needed. And then MICO, an energy and chemical company based in Trebic, 125 miles from Kladno, offered to do the manufactur­ing.

Flights between the two places helped fine- tune the production line in a few weeks.

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