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#11 | |
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Married to a beautiful babe whom I don't deserve. Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Central Texas
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https://museum.aarc.org/galleries/early-icu-ventilators/ I have to post this link here, for those who are interested in ventilators, what they are and some history into how they have evolved. You see, this is what gives me a lot of hope. The principles of mechanical ventilation are the same today as they were back in the 1950's, as my profession was evolving. These days, modern vents are driven by computer modules and OS's (Operating Systems/Interfaces), but it wasn't always so. A return to these essential basics is what we can turn back to, in a pinch. We can always put something together that will accomplish the goal.....moving a gas/air mixture in and out of the lungs. This can be done in a very basic sense, with some very simple off-the-shelf materials. It doesn't really need to be all that complex. It just needs to work. Back when I was in college, a medical center I worked at (Maine Medical Center, in Portland, ME) was still using the old Emerson mechanical ventilators from the 1950's in post-op cardio-thoracic patients. Those vents had no software programming to assist in making calculations for patient settings. We RT's did it with pens, paper and pocket calculators. ![]() I used to always tell my RT students, in the clinic, to NOT become "knob turners and button pushers". They needed to learn to: 1. Know what they were doing, 2. Why they were doing it, 2. How to do it, and 3. What to do to fix it when things went wrong. Expect the unexpected and know how to fix it. This crisis, right now, is why I taught them what I did. One must always be prepared to return to the basics. ![]() ~Theo~ ![]()
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"All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost; The old that is strong does not wither, Deep roots are not reached by the frost." -- J. R. R. Tolkien
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