The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Ventilator demand spiraling, maker says By Jinshan Hong and Dong Lyu
The growing number of patients critically sick with the coronavirus is fueling demand for ventilators to at least 10 times what is available at hospitals around the world, said China’s top medical device maker. What makers are seeing
Shenzhen Mindray Bio-Medical Electronics Co., along with other Chinese ventilator makers, has seen overseas orders surge as countries scramble for more of the machines used in intensive care units. In severe cases, the availability of a ventilator to help a COVID-19 patient breathe can determine if he lives or dies.
“The demand is several times the orders we can take, the orders are several times our current capacity, and our capacity now is already several times what it used to be,” said Li Wenmei, the company’s board secretary, in an interview with Bloomberg on Wednesday.
As the global death toll from the coronavirus crosses 18,000, doctors from Milan to New York are desperately seeking ventilators. Hospitals that usually have just a few of the machines now face the need for one per critically ill patient. While President Donald Trump has given the go-ahead to automakers like Tesla to try to manufacture ventilators to make up the shortfall, the complex devices aren’t as easily churned out as other medical supplies like surgical masks or disinfectant.
Overall in the U.S., the Society of Critical Care Medicine estimates that 960,000 patients would need ventilator support due to COVID-19, but the nation only has about 200,000 such machines. In Italy, the country with the most number of fatalities from the pandemic, a severe ventilator shortage has forced doctors to triage patients.
How some makers are coping
Mindray, which makes as many as 3,000 ventilators a month, is now trying to delay delivery of orders to domestic clients so as to ship products to overseas buyers in more urgent need first, said Li. China’s new cases of coronavirus infections have dwindled, and its people are resuming work and normal life, even as the epidemic accelerates globally.
Production of patient monitors, which tracks the vital signs of those in critical condition, has also ramped up nearly threefold since last year, said Li. Mindray now makes 30,000 monitors a month.
Ventilators pump oxygen into the lungs and remove carbon dioxide from the body.