MedWOW / used medical equipment / Intensive Care Unit Equipment / Ventilator, Intensive Care / JiangXi TeLi
New & Used Ventilator, Intensive Care, JiangXi TeLi
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Tips for buying Ventilator, Intensive Care
- All intensive care ventilators should offer assist/control and SIMV modes, and for volume and pressure breaths, should provide CPAP/PEEP and pressure support.
- The following measures should be monitored by the intensive care ventilators: airway pressure, respiratory rate, I: E ratio, and minute volume. Controls should be available for pressure level, tidal volume, breath rate, inspiratory time, FiO2, PEEP/CPAP, I: E ratio, pressure support, and sensitivity.
- Visual and audible alarms should be available for inspiratory pressure low, CPAP/PEEP, minute volume, respiratory rate, gas supply loss, and power failure.
- The intensive care ventilator should provide clear alarms. If users can adjust the alarm volume, they should not be able to turn it down so the alarm is inaudible.
- If the alarm condition is not corrected, the alarm silence feature must reactivate automatically within two minutes. If an alarm is silenced, a visual display should clearly indicate which alarm is disabled.
- An O2 analyzer should be included with the intensive care ventilator to monitor the delivered O2 or O2/air mixture. The analyzer should include an alarm for concentrations outside acceptable ranges.
- All respirator controls should be clear, with easy-to-understand functions. Misinterpretation of displays and control settings should not occur. Controls should be protected against accidental setting and sealed against fluid penetration.
- Fluid spills should not affect patient and operator safety and system performance.
- Intensive care ventilators with good human factors design are desirable in an environment where staff shortages and frequent employee turnover make formal training difficult. It is also recommended to standardize Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) Ventilator equipment to minimize retraining and confusion, and to get discounts for large quantities of intermittent positive-pressure breathing units.
- Different intensive care ventilators offer many features such as modes, variables monitored and controlled, and alarms. Facilities should evaluate these features to determine whether they are needed for a particular patient population and clinical setting.

