0 an opening or a device that allows fresh air to come into a closed space:
The bathroom had no window but it had an electric ventilator.
He was brought into intensive care shortly after the accident and immediately put on a ventilator.
Three days after surgery, she was taken off the ventilator, but had to go back on it a day later.
Early reports found death rates as high as 90% among COVID-19 patients on ventilators.
He was still in a critical ward, still breathing through a ventilator and still without feeling in any of his limbs.
The homes' ventilators are linked to their hot-water systems, providing heat and air conditioning, and filtering out more than 95 percent of airborne particles.
The new setup will add escape routes for staff and visitors and include emergency ventilators to purge the building of smoke or fumes.
His kidneys were failing and a ventilator was forcing air continually into his lungs.
The inner frames, the trickle ventilators and other items are all painted dark grey.
The criminal law can respond to it as a tolerable and justifiable exception to basic criminal law rules developed long before ventilators ever existed.
There should be sufficient protection against impact, manifestations of glazing, safe opening and closing windows, skylights and ventilators and safe access to clean the glass.
The right-to-die movement, for example, tied notions of a "natural death" with a suspicion of ventilators and feeding tubes.
There are some patients who are permanently maintained on ventilators because of illness.
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