| | | They could heat the used equipment to 140 deg C to kill diseases, wash off any blood and goo and reuse the masks, gloves etc. In the process, heaps of protective equipment are used - often many dozens of gloves, gowns, masks, and more.
And chest compressions to replace failed heart function are so last century, ineffectual and damaging, as well as hard work to do. My invention of a see saw stretcher keeps blood flowing so no heart action or chest compression is necessary.
Tilt the person on the see saw so they are feet down, head up. Hold for 1 second then swivel the see saw the other way so their head is down 30 degrees and feet up 30 degrees. Hold for 1 second then reverse. Keep doing that.
The valves in legs and elsewhere make blood flow one way only. So wen legs are down, the valves stop the blood flowing back down. When legs are up, the blood runs downhill through the valves, heading back to the heart and lungs. There are valves around the body so the circulation system is designed for blood to flow the right direction.
A motor could be included in the see saw apparatus so that helpers don't have to rock the see saw manually.
My see saw method is especially good when people have wounds which leak blood, especially in torso injuries. Heavily squashing a chest will cause further injury and stop wounds clotting to prevent further leakage of blood. Rocking on a see saw would do no further danage and clotting could work as normal to reduce leakage while blood is circulated.
Mqurice |
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