কোভিড-১৯: গ্লোবের টিকা কতদূর? bdnews24.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bdnews24.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
As the demand for oxygen increased at hospitals amid this second wave of the pandemic, a group of Buet researchers has developed a low-cost portable ventilator that can deliver oxygen to patients efficiently without electricity.
The non-invasive device, which requires a connection with an cylinder or medical oxygen supply, is designed to help severe coronavirus patients with low oxygen levels, according to the researchers.
Named OxyJet CPAP by the researchers from Buet s Department of Biomedical Engineering, it has already been field-tested and approved for clinical trials.
This device can be used in remote villages or ambulances wherever it is possible to carry cylinders as an alternative to the high-flow nasal oxygen (HFNO) support.
Bangladesh develops nasal spray that kills coronavirus siasat.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from siasat.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Bangladesh Reference Institute for Chemical Measurement (BRICM), set up by the government for the development of chemical metrology, has developed a spray a nasal spray which they say 'can kill' the Covid-19 virus on contact. The Bangasafe Oro-Nasal Spray is touted to help people kill the virus as it is already known that the transmission points are the mouth, nose and the
Hope, there will be some positive outcome, said Prof Dr Shahla Khatun, chairman of the ethical Committee at BMRC.
Uncertainty looms large after India the lone supplier of the Covid-19 vaccine expressed its inability in delivering vaccines to Bangladesh.
The crisis could have been avoided had the government not relied on a single source and took the advantage of other sources who had offered vaccines to Bangladesh earlier, experts believe. Since we ve a large population, it is a common sense that we were needed to explore more options [for vaccine], said Prof Be-Nazir Ahmed, former director of disease control at the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.