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Fighting coronavirus with new ventilator? There’s an app for that

A nurse pulls a ventilator into an exam room where a patient with COVID-19 went into cardiac arrest Monday, April 20, 2020, at St. Joseph's Hospital in Yonkers, N.Y. The emergency room team successfully revived the patient. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) (John Minchillo, Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

There are 160,000 ventilators in the United States. During the COVID-19 crisis, many have been deployed to the centers where the need has been greatest.

One expert said there are 38 different manufacturers and more than 400 models of respirators that all have their own settings.

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Now scientists at the Cleveland Clinic have introduced a program that is helping providers on the front lines learn how to operate an unfamiliar system quickly.

“The usage of mechanical ventilators has increased exponentially in a very short period of time,” said Robert Chatburn MHHS, professor of medicine at Lerner College of Medicine and enterprise program manager of respiratory care research at Cleveland Clinic. "And therefore, the people who must use the ventilators and understand how to operate them have to come up to speed very quickly.”

“There are 38 different manufacturers and 400 and something models. They each have proprietary settings,” noted Jay Alberts, PhD,

Dr. Jay ALberts, neuroscientist and bioengineer at Cleveland Clinic, said to think of the ventilator like a car. D means drive in every make or model, but other operations vary widely and time is often of the essence by the time a patient arrives in an ER with coronavirus symptoms.

Alberts said three years ago his bioengineering students began working on a cellphone app to help providers understand how to use different types of ventilators. The project was shelved because there was no pressing need until now.

“We updated it, revived it, and turned it really from a student project to a full-fledged development project. And that took really about a week for us to turn it around,” Alberts said.

Users can tap on a model of ventilator they are familiar with, and then tap on a picture of their new model to get information on how to find settings and program it.

“It’s a very easy application that really just tries to connect two dots," Alberts said.

That can save time -- and lives -- on the hospital front lines.

Alberts said the Ventilator Mode Map App is live right now at the Cleveland Clinic and is available to other caregivers across the U.S. It’s free to download and is available on the iTunes store and Android play store.