That looks amazing! Everywhere I go I take my ventilator and suction machine, and when travelling I take 2 ventilators, a suction machine, a nebuliser and a cough assist machine.
It’s an okay ventilator for long term vent. Dependent. It’s not for hospital use because it’s not aggressive for acute lung injury. You need a respiratory therapist or an INTENSIVIST doctor to help design. I used it and it not great for acute lung injury or ards... I wouldn’t recommend it for hospital. It’s for long term facility like an Ltac..
Thank you for your comment, Adam. We would welcome the chance to hear more about your feedback. Please email us at info@venteclife.com so we can follow up with you.
I prefer drager personally never used vocsn. I will be soon. Definetely nice for long term chronic patients. For ards your talking being able to do inverse ratios and 3:1 ratios, high peep levels. I dont see this doing that. It is nice it has the option of high flow o2
Hello Raad, Thank you for your interest in VOCSN. Currently, the rates for VOCSN vary based on insurance coverage, state, and home medical equipment providers (otherwise known as DME companies). We would be happy to support with your individual needs. Please fill out this form and we will get back to you. www.venteclife.com/page/contact-us-for-patient-support
so this is the ventilator that GM now needs to produce 40k units from? GM with its boasting now needs to walk the talk through the defense production act. What kind of management GM has, is beyond me... but at least they now need to make them!
You saw it. I is all there, in that single box, with the touch screen and the tubing. The man is carrying the "machine". It's not like the ones we're used to seeing in an ICU.
That looks amazing! Everywhere I go I take my ventilator and suction machine, and when travelling I take 2 ventilators, a suction machine, a nebuliser and a cough assist machine.
Can it be used for patients who have acute respiratory failure and need a ventilator to breath for them?
This is more for chronic pts. Acute resp failure requires emergency care
I should’ve invested in this Before all of this. Good luck 👍
It’s an okay ventilator for long term vent. Dependent. It’s not for hospital use because it’s not aggressive for acute lung injury. You need a respiratory therapist or an INTENSIVIST doctor to help design. I used it and it not great for acute lung injury or ards... I wouldn’t recommend it for hospital. It’s for long term facility like an Ltac..
Thank you for your comment, Adam. We would welcome the chance to hear more about your feedback. Please email us at info@venteclife.com so we can follow up with you.
I prefer drager personally never used vocsn. I will be soon. Definetely nice for long term chronic patients. For ards your talking being able to do inverse ratios and 3:1 ratios, high peep levels. I dont see this doing that. It is nice it has the option of high flow o2
I would love to see that place ! An interview? Can it go to space?
Any input from Registered Respiratory Therapists? Weaning modalities? Use in critical and post operative care settings?
what is the price of this device
Hello Raad, Thank you for your interest in VOCSN. Currently, the rates for VOCSN vary based on insurance coverage, state, and home medical equipment providers (otherwise known as DME companies). We would be happy to support with your individual needs. Please fill out this form and we will get back to you. www.venteclife.com/page/contact-us-for-patient-support
Multiple uses are great but is it the same turbine driven noisey dry your throat out in 2 minutes and can't talk vent like the LTV and trilogy?
@@andyt680 Do you use humidity or just an HME?
@@FirstnameLastname-vy2dg both. I've always had two ventilators.
so this is the ventilator that GM now needs to produce 40k units from?
GM with its boasting now needs to walk the talk through the defense production act.
What kind of management GM has, is beyond me... but at least they now need to make them!
this is a bad video, I never saw entire machine
You saw it. I is all there, in that single box, with the touch screen and the tubing. The man is carrying the "machine". It's not like the ones we're used to seeing in an ICU.