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By REED ALBERGOTTI AND AARON GREGG | The Washington Post | Published: January 7, 2021
Stars and Stripes is making stories on the coronavirus pandemic available free of charge. See other free reports here. Sign up for our daily coronavirus newsletter here. Please support our journalism with a subscription. This spring, amid a panic over a shortage of ventilators to treat the anticipated surge in coronavirus cases, the Pentagon announced the purchase of $84 million worth of breathing machines from four companies. One of the ventilators, the SAVe II+, made by a small Plano, Texas-based company called AutoMedx, stood out from the rest. To start, the deal was for an upgraded version of the SAVe II that hadn t even been designed yet, according to the company s chairman. In addition, the existing $6,000 SAVe II machine, developed with military backing as a lightweight ventilator to keep wounded soldiers alive while being transported from the battlefield, had specifications far below
The U.S. paid a Texas company nearly $70 million for ventilators that were unfit for covid-19 patients. Why? Reed Albergotti, Aaron Gregg A Special Forces senior combat medic demonstrates the proper use of the SAVe II respiratory ventilator as part of Special Operations COVID-19 Rapid Assessment, Treatment, and Emergency Services (SOCRATES) training. (Sgt. Angela Walter/10th Special Forces Group Airborne) This spring, amid a panic over a shortage of ventilators to treat the anticipated surge in coronavirus cases, the Pentagon announced the purchase of $84 million worth of breathing machines from four companies. One of the ventilators, the SAVe II+, made by a small Plano, Tex.-based company called AutoMedx, stood out from the rest.