A message from Virgin Orbit:
Virgin Orbit has developed a new mass-producible bridge ventilator
to help in the fight against the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. The
Virgin Orbit team has been consulting with the Bridge Ventilator
Consortium (BVC), led by the University of California Irvine (UCI) and
the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin), a group formed to spawn
and nurture efforts to build producible, simple ventilators to aid in
the current COVID-19 crisis. Pending clearance by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), Virgin Orbit aims to commence production at its
Long Beach manufacturing facility in early April, sprinting to deliver
units into the hands of first responders and healthcare professionals
as soon as possible.
As the COVID-19 crisis worsens and the paucity of medical equipment
becomes more and more clear, the Virgin Orbit team is strongly
motivated to do all that we can to help. On a normal day, we’re
building rockets and other equipment for space launch; we are not
medical doctors nor are we usually manufacturers of medical devices.
But we do have a team of incredibly innovative and agile thinkers —
experts in designing, fabricating, programming, testing — who are
eager to lend a hand.
After contacting Governor Gavin Newsom last week, Virgin Orbit was
directed by his office to the California Emergency Medical Services
Authority (CEMSA) and put in contact with the BVC.
The BVC is a team of brilliant doctors, medical device experts, and
researchers at UCI and UT Austin who are working around the clock,
sharing ideas across a broad national and international network to
share best practices and design insights and to accelerate progress on
solutions to this equipment shortage. Today, complex, high-end,
ICU-capable ventilators are sometimes the only option available for
moderate cases — for people who don’t necessarily need intensive care
or have partially recovered. By supplying “bridge” ventilators, Virgin
Orbit’s device can free up those critical resources for the most
ill.
“We face a slow-motion Dunkirk, and getting ventilators
out there is very important to save lives,” said Dr. Brian J.F. Wong,
assistant chairman of otolaryngology at UCI. “The demand outstrips
supply, so it is important the government, industry, academia,
non-profits, and the community work together to identify solutions,
and design and construct them as fast as possible.”
Virgin Orbit engineers have taken rapid scaling into account from
the beginning of the design process, taking advantage of the most
common and robust manufacturing and assembly processes. The company’s
aim is to have a functioning, deployable bridge ventilator in
production in early April. Virgin Orbit would continue on to rapidly
scale up to mass production in its Long Beach facility, in addition to
potentially activating other manufacturers as soon as the new device
is reproducible and production-ready.
“We are all heartbroken each night as we turn on the news and see
the predicament facing doctors and nurses as they heroically work to
save lives,” said Virgin Orbit CEO Dan Hart. “I have never seen our
team working harder. Never seen ideas moving quicker from design to
prototype. We are hopeful that this device can help as we all prepare
for the challenges ahead.”