Medical Ventilation
Whether ventilation for premature babies, adults, emergency situations or during patient transportation: Dräger can provide you with the appropriate solution for every situation.
This enables you to give each of your patients precisely the treatment they need.
For more than 100 years we have focused on supporting you in improving therapeutic successes and preventing complications.
Dräger can support you with the ventilation needs of your patients:
Our entire range of ventilators is characterised by a series of common features:
- Complete solutions, including accessories and consumables, help to reduce the risk of infection.
- Easy handling and intuitive design simplify operation, promote increased productivity and can contribute to patient safety.
- Our concept of "free breathing" makes spontaneous breathing possible at any time during mechanical ventilation.1
- Non-invasive ventilation2 including comfortable masks as a gentle alternative to intubation. Non-invasive ventilation can help prevent or delay intubation, therefore encouraging the minimisation of nosocomial infection.3,4,5
Dräger’s range of ventilators covers the following areas:
- Emergency and transportation ventilation
- Intensive-care ventilation of adults, children and newborns
- Ventilation at intermediate-care stations
A selection of our Products:
Evita® 4 edition
The Evita® 4 has been recognised around the world as a leader in ventilation performance.
Savina®
Maintain high standards of ventilation therapy for adult and paediatric patients of all acuity levels, even in challenging environments.
- Ram FSF et al, The Cochrane Library 2005, Issue 4
- Not suitable for the Oxylog 1000
- Rello J et al.: Epidemiology and Outcomes of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia in a large US Database, in: Chest, 2002, 122:2115-21
- Tablan OC et al.: Guidelines for Preventing Health-Care-Associated Pneumonia, 2003, in: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep, 2004, 53(RR-3):1-36
- Craven DE: Preventing Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia in Adults – Sowing Seeds of Change, in: Chest, 2006, 130:251-60