Telerobotic Operation of Intensive Care Unit Ventilators
Balazs P. Vagvolgyi, Mikhail Khrenov, Jonathan Cope, Anton Deguet,, Peter Kazanzides, Sajid Manzoor, Russell H. Taylor, Axel Krieger

TL;DR
This paper presents a low-cost telerobotic system that allows ICU ventilator adjustments remotely, reducing PPE use and saving time for respiratory therapists during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, simple robotic system for remote ventilator control, addressing limitations of existing ICU equipment without network connectivity.
Findings
Mechanical repeatability of 7.5 mm
Positioning error of 5.94 mm under visual control
Reduced ventilator adjustment time from 271 to 109 seconds
Abstract
Since the first reports of a novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) in December 2019, over 33 million people have been infected worldwide and approximately 1 million people worldwide have died from the disease caused by this virus, COVID-19. In the US alone, there have been approximately 7 million cases and over 200,000 deaths. This outbreak has placed an enormous strain on healthcare systems and workers. Severe cases require hospital care, and 8.5\% of patients require mechanical ventilation in an intensive care unit (ICU). One major challenge is the necessity for clinical care personnel to don and doff cumbersome personal protective equipment (PPE) in order to enter an ICU unit to make simple adjustments to ventilator settings. Although future ventilators and other ICU equipment may be controllable remotely through computer networks, the enormous installed base of existing ventilators do not…
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