Israeli defense electronics firm Elbit Systems said on Monday it had repurposed assembly lines to manufacture thousands of automatic ventilation machines as the country eyes local production to off-set global shortages due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Based on technology developed by LifeCan Medical, the Elbit machines will enable medical centares to provide initial care to patients suffering from less severe respiratory conditions, said the company, which is better known for its advanced weapons platforms and surveillance systems.
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With more than 11,000 coronavirus cases and 115 fatalities from COVID-19 lung disease, Israel has joined the international scramble for new ventilators – even dispatching the Mossad intelligence agency to hunt down devices abroad.
Orly Weinstein, head of the Health Ministry's procurement division, said Israel must be self-reliant, as some suppliers in other countries have inflated prices or canceled orders so that resources can be redirected to their own governments.
"My problem is the competition with other countries. The sooner you identify the (health crisis) event, the sooner you can place orders for equipment. The second lesson: Manufacture it yourself," she told financial daily Calcalist on Monday.
According to the Health Ministry, Israel now has around 3,500 ventilators or roughly one for every 2,500 citizens.
By comparison, the United States can muster as many as 200,000 ventilators, according to a March 25 article by the Society of Critical Care Medicine - one for every 1,635 Americans.
Israeli officials have said they aimed to increase their national ventilator stockpile to 7,000 by next month.
Israel may also be called on to provide ventilators for Palestinians in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, where currently there is just one machine for every 16,000 people. The Palestinians have reported around 308 coronavirus cases and two fatalities.
At the request of the Israeli government, Elbit said, the company had converted two manufacturing facilities into assembly lines for the new ventilators. With around-the-clock shifts, these are expected to start producing around 300 machines per week after the Jewish holiday of Passover ends on Wednesday.
Another defense firm, state-owned Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), said last month it would mass-produce ventilators in cooperation with the government and medical device-maker Inovytec.
Separately, a team of Israeli scientists this week unveiled a rudimentary ventilator – called AmboVent – which it said could be built easily for a cost of $500 to $1,000 each, a fraction of the price of many commercially available machines.
Intended as a back-up for underfunded health systems worldwide, the AmboVent's manufacturing schematics have been made available online for free, the designers said.