USA TODAY International Edition

IPhone cable maker Belkin now producing ventilator­s

- Talking Tech Follow USA TODAY’s Jefferson Graham (@ jeffersongraha­m) on Twitter.

The company that makes your iPhone charging cable and home router is joining in on the coronaviru­s fight. Belkin Internatio­nal has started making what it calls “low- cost” ventilator­s at manufactur­ing plants in Providence, Rhode Island.

These are sub-$ 200 units aimed for emergencie­s and less severe cases of COVID- 19, compared to more full- featured units that cost in the tens of thousands of dollars.

“This is one of the most urgent humanitari­an crises we have experience­d in our lifetimes and the number one responsibi­lity for each of us in this moment is the care and compassion for others in need,” said Chet Pipkin, CEO and founder of Belkin.

Belkin isn’t the only tech firm helping with the coronaviru­s fight. Apple has begun delivering on its promise of providing 20 million face masks for medical workers and has shipped 2 million face shield for first responders – and posted its shield design online for other manufactur­ers. Google sourced 49,000 face shields which it donated to San Francisco Bay Area hospitals. Automakers Ford and General Motors are both making ventilator­s.

The pandemic has claimed the lives of about 80,000 people in the United States, where there have been more than 1.3 million reported cases according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Many governors have said they are in dire need of more ventilator­s.

The response to COVID- 19 showed the world that there will be a need for ventilator­s, after the pandemic, Pipkin says. “It showed that things can happen that are completely unexpected and at a scale that very few of us were able to imagine, or appreciate.”

Belkin is a unit of FoxConn, the giant Taiwan company that’s best known for manufactur­ing iPhones at its Shenzhen plant.

“It was obvious there’s a critical need for ventilator­s and not just for the short term,” says Pipkin. “We have no excuse not to get prepared.”

Los Angeles- based Belkin churns out lots of cables, routers under the Linksys brand, the Wemo products for smart homes and wireless chargers. It’s looking to make at least 10,000 ventilator­s.

So how did it learn how to go outside of their zone to medical supplies?

“We felt a responsibi­lity to be helpful to others,” he says, but acknowledg­es that Belkin didn’t have the expertise to design a ventilator. “We reached out to the network,” and found experts to guide the way.

The University of Illinois at UrbanaCham­paign’s Grainger College of Engineerin­g had the design, and Belkin also consulted with Carle Health of Urbana, Illinois, for what’s being called the FlexVent. It’s under production now, but pending the review and approval of its Emergency Use Authorizat­ion applicatio­n by the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

Belkin’s pitch: the FlexVent will be used as a single- use emergency ventilator that can provide constant- flow, pressure- cycled ventilatio­n automatica­lly to patients in respirator­y distress.

Charles Dennis, Carle’s chief medical officer, says that while he’s seeing a flattening of the curve locally in Urbana where the health system is located, and the system has enough ventilator­s for now, he’s concerned COVID- 19 will come roaring back in the summer and fall.

“It’s prudent for us to prepare for potential surges,” he says.

Having the lower- cost ventilator­s available will help with lower- risk patients while keeping the more expensive, full- duty ventilator­s on reserve for patients with greater need,” he says.

“We have no excuse not to get prepared.”

Chet Pipkin CEO and founder of Belkin Internatio­nal

 ??  ?? University of Illinois researcher­s work with FlexVent ventilator­s, which are pending review and approval by the FDA. COURTESY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
University of Illinois researcher­s work with FlexVent ventilator­s, which are pending review and approval by the FDA. COURTESY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
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