Literature DB >> 33773116

The medical right to repair: the right to save lives.

Shuhan He1, Debbie Lai2, Jarone Lee3.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33773116      PMCID: PMC7990498          DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(21)00445-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet        ISSN: 0140-6736            Impact factor:   79.321


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Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, hospitals worldwide have reported inadequate supplies of crucial equipment such as ventilators, haemodialysis machines, personal protective equipment, and decontamination equipment. Having functional crucial equipment is essential for hospitals to meet patient care needs, especially now, when there is a demand for nearly every ventilator to be called into near constant service in COVID-19 hotspots worldwide. With high-use demands brought on by COVID-19, even for newer equipment, repair and maintenance issues arise from high use related to patient volume, acuity, and turnover. COVID-19 has forced hospitals to use ventilators that have been in storage for many years, including some that were previously decommissioned. COVID-19 emphasises the longstanding refusal by manufacturers to provide information for repairing medical equipment. For years, manufacturers have curtailed the ability of hospitals to independently repair and maintain medical equipment by preventing access to the necessary knowledge, software, tools, and parts. A solution exists—one that exists in other sectors of our economy. The right to repair is the right of consumers to repair and modify their own consumer electronic devices, such as mobile phones and automobiles. The European Commission announced plans in March, 2020, for new rules for the right to repair that would cover mobile phones, tablets, and laptops by 2021. In the USA, Massachusetts state passed the country's first Motor Vehicle Owners' Right to Repair Act in 2012, requiring automobile manufacturers to provide the necessary information for anyone to repair their vehicles. There is an opportunity now for the medical community to ensure that the medical field benefits from access rights to open data that are similar to the rights for consumer electronics and automobiles. In August, 2020, Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon introduced the Critical Medical Infrastructure Right-to-Repair Act of 2020, removing barriers to fixing medical equipment during the COVID-19 pandemic that were imposed by manufacturers. This bill requires that manufacturers provide, on fair and reasonable terms, access to information and tools that can be used to diagnose, maintain, or repair medical equipment. The law also allows owners, lessees, and services for medical equipment to repair or maintain crucial medical infrastructure in response to COVID-19. During these extraordinary times, such legislation for the right to repair not only moves the medical field in a more affordable, efficient, and sustainable direction but also enables life-saving services to continue to be available at times of high stress. SH is an unpaid board member of GetUsPPE. DL is chief operating officer of CovidActNow. JL reports grants from Beckman Coulter and Nihon-Kohden; and personal fees from Butterfly Network, unrelated to this Correspondence.
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1.  Physician and first responder collaborations to ease personal protective equipment shortages.

Authors:  Shuhan He; Vladimir Ivkovic; Jonathan Friedstat; Jarone Lee
Journal:  Am J Emerg Med       Date:  2021-06-29       Impact factor: 4.093

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