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Elon Musk Says He Procured 1,255 Ventilators from China to Aid in Coronavirus Response

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Elon Musk Says He Procured 1,255 Ventilators from China to Aid in Coronavirus Response

"If you want a free ventilator installed, please let us know!" the SpaceX founder tweeted on Monday

March 24, 2020 12:54 AM

Elon Musk is helping to tackle the shortage of ventilators amid the ongoing coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

In two tweets on Monday, the SpaceX and Tesla founder, 48, shared that he recently procured 1,225 ventilators from China and had them shipped to the United States to help meet hospital demands and aid in coronavirus relief efforts.

According to Musk, China “had an oversupply, so we bought 1255 FDA-approved ResMed, Philips & Medtronic ventilators on Friday night & airshipped them to LA.”

“If you want a free ventilator installed, please let us know!” he tweeted, before thanking his Tesla team in China as well as customs for “acting so swiftly” in shipping the medical equipment stateside.

Yup, China had an oversupply, so we bought 1255 FDA-approved ResMed, Philips & Medtronic ventilators on Friday night & airshipped them to LA. If you want a free ventilator installed, please let us know!

Musk’s tweets came just hours after California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced in a press conference that Musk had followed through on his promise to deliver ventilators to hospitals treating patients diagnosed with COVID-19, calling the act “an heroic effort.”

“Elon Musk: how about this? I told you a few days ago he was likely to have 1,000 ventilators this week,” Newsom said. “They arrived in Los Angeles and Elon Musk is already working with the hospital association and others to get those ventilators out in real time.”

Since the coronavirus outbreak, the World Health Organization has urged countries to “optimize the availability” of ventilators — which assists in breathing functions — as oxygen therapy “is the major treatment intervention for patients with severe Covid-19.”


Musk previously floated the idea of using his Tesla car factory to manufacture ventilators during the coronavirus outbreak, tweeting on Wednesday, “We will make ventilators if there is a shortage.”

When a Twitter user asked how many ventilators he planned on making as “there’s a shortage now,” the tech mogul replied, “Tesla makes cars with sophisticated hvac systems. SpaceX makes spacecraft with life support systems. Ventilators are not difficult, but cannot be produced instantly. Which hospitals have these shortages you speak of right now?”

According to the Society of Critical Care Medicine, its been projected that 960,000 coronavirus patients in the U.S. will require the use of a ventilator during the health crisis. However, the organization estimates there are only 200,000 units available nationally.

“The real issue is how to rapidly increase ventilator production when your need exceeds the supply,” Dr. Lewis Kaplan, president of the critical care society, told Associated Press last week. “For that I don’t have a very good answer.”

https://people.com/health/elon-musk-procured-ventilators-from-china-coronavirus-response/
 
Yup, China had an oversupply, so we bought 1255 FDA-approved ResMed, Philips & Medtronic ventilators on Friday night & airshipped them to LA. If you want a free ventilator installed, please let us know!
Amazing how Chinese manufacturers can turn the table from short supply to over supply in such a short time.
 
According to Musk, China “had an oversupply, so we bought 1255 FDA-approved ResMed, Philips & Medtronic ventilators on Friday night & airshipped them to LA.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ResMed
ResMed is a San Diego, California-based medical equipment company

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philips
is a Dutch multinational conglomerate corporation headquartered in Amsterdam

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medtronic
Medtronic has an operational and executive headquarters in Fridley, Minnesota in the U.S
 
Some reports in China say no matter how many ventilators China can provide for US, they won't help much, because US doesn't have enough experienced medical workers who can operate ventilators on patients properly, that requires a lot of training and operating experiences.
 
Some reports in China say no matter how many ventilators China can provide for US, they won't help much, because US doesn't have enough experienced medical workers who can operate ventilators on patients properly, that requires a lot of training and operating experiences.

Since we know the virus originated in a Chinese lab we would expect you to have extensively pre-trained hundreds of thousands of your medical workers on how to specifically use ventilators.
 
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Some reports in the US said historically it was very hard to train the Chinese on how to use ventilators because it was a Western invention and the Chinese refused to abandon traditional medicine.
OK, fine with me, they both can be true and both can be fault. Readers have their own brains to judge.
 
Some reports in China say no matter how many ventilators China can provide for US, they won't help much, because US doesn't have enough experienced medical workers who can operate ventilators on patients properly, that requires a lot of training and operating experiences.
I have never been on a ventilator.
But have seen many being used on my usually aged hospital bed mates
Don't seem too difficult to put on and operate.

If true, it would seem skill of US medical workers leave much to be desired.
.
 
I have never been on a ventilator.
But have seen many being used on my usually aged hospital bed mates
Don't seem too difficult to put on and operate.

If true, it would seem skill of US medical workers leave much to be desired.
.

You are a genius surely a left outliers on the intelligence bell curve.

 
You are a genius surely a left outliers on the intelligence bell curve.

Well compared to IQ82, I may seem to be a genius.
Except when comparing LYING and BULL SHITTING abilities, no.
.
 
I have never been on a ventilator.
But have seen many being used on my usually aged hospital bed mates
Don't seem too difficult to put on and operate.

If true, it would seem skill of US medical workers leave much to be desired.
.
they probably are used in CPAP mode that's why you think they are easy to operate .they are something that usually most be set by Anesthesiologist or Emergency Medicine specialist . rarely you can see a surgeon or internist who feel comfortable setting it up. there simply is two many vriable and mode and too many different condition for different patient to consider .
 
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they probably are used in CPAP mode that's why you think they are easy to operate .they are something that usually most be set by Anesthesiologist or Emergency Medicine specialist . rarely you can see a surgeon or internist who feel comfortable setting it up. there simply is two many vriable and mode and too many different condition for different patient to consider .
Don't know what is CPAP.
These ventilators are applied only by those staff nurses who had gone through a course and are certified.
The process of putting it on the patient looks quite simple though.

I wonder if they group all the old people together.
Where I stay, they have lots of fellow old folks and very often some of them have breathing problem.
Luckily I insist on discharge, hospital food was unbearable, just before this onslaught of coronavirus, haha.
Had to sign a form to imdemnify the hospital.
.
 
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