SafeBVM Corp

SafeBVM Corp SafeBVM is a Medical Device Company Dedicated to Improving Survival Through Safer Manual Ventilation

How can EMS agencies, fire departments, medical directors, and academic centers work together to advance prehospital res...
05/19/2026

How can EMS agencies, fire departments, medical directors, and academic centers work together to advance prehospital research?

Join CFED, SafeBVM, and Ambu live on Zoom tomorrow for a brief educational leadership program featuring Dr. Marianne Gausche-Hill of CAL-ROC.

Dr. Gausche-Hill will share how the California Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium is helping build a statewide model for EMS research focused on out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and improved prehospital care.

đź“… Wednesday, May 20, 2026
⏰ 6:00 PM – 6:30 PM PDT

ZOOM Registration Link:
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/2217792047060/WN_qDRvnWNiTEOyk680H2iW5Q

05/14/2026

Helping teams ventilate safer.
Felipe shares his experience with Sotair® and how training can help emergency personnel improve manual ventilation technique and reduce risks during critical moments.

05/13/2026

“Why have we not used this before?”
Lieutenant Ryan Lavender from Hoover Fire Department shares how Sotair® has worked for his team during manual ventilation training and stressful situations in the field.
When providers start to over-squeeze, Sotair helps create a reset: slow it down, take your time, and deliver more controlled breaths.

05/06/2026

Chief Mike Antonucci said it best: “You gotta try this thing.”
For 20 years, the CFED Conference has brought EMS leaders, fire chiefs, paramedics, educators, and industry innovators together to improve lifesaving care in the field.
SafeBVM is honored to join CFED and share Sotair and SotairIQ — flow-control technology paired with an advanced training platform designed to support practical EMS education around manual ventilation and bag-valve-mask ventilation.
We look forward to seeing EMS and fire leaders at CFED.

Join us tomorrow, May 5th at 1pm CT for the next Mastering Flow Control in Manual Ventilation virtual Zoom workshop. Lin...
05/04/2026

Join us tomorrow, May 5th at 1pm CT for the next Mastering Flow Control in Manual Ventilation virtual Zoom workshop. Link in bio/ first comment.

05/01/2026

EMS Lt. Ryan Lavender from Hoover Fire Department shares how quickly crews can understand and train with Sotair®.
For EMS teams, practicality matters. Sotair® was designed to be simple, intuitive, and field-ready — helping providers support safer manual ventilation without adding unnecessary complexity.
Watch the full video on the SafeBVM YouTube channel.

04/28/2026

Mask seal with 1 thumb?!

Quick clarification on this clip:
Yes — this is on a mannequin, and mannequins are not the same as real patients. Real airway management includes sweat, blood, vomit, facial hair, poor positioning, difficult anatomy, movement, and stress.

This is not meant to replace proper BVM technique.

The point of the clip is that mask-handling details can sometimes help the cushion sit better on the face during training and in select situations.

For real patients, fundamentals still come first:
Open the airway.
Position the patient.
Pull the jaw/face into the mask — don’t just push the mask down.
Use two-person BVM ventilation whenever possible.
Use two hands on the mask when resources allow.
Monitor chest rise, compliance, EtCOâ‚‚, and patient response.

Simple tips can be helpful, but they do not replace good airway positioning, jaw thrust/head tilt-chin lift when appropriate, mask fit, training, critical thinking, and teamwork.

Train the fundamentals. Practice the technique. Keep it simple.

Dr. Jeff Beeson was a panelist during the - Emergency Medical Services resuscitation discussion at FDIC 2026 in Indianapolis.

04/27/2026

High-acuity EMS calls are not controlled environments.
EMS Lt. Ryan Lavender from Hoover Fire Department explains how quickly an emergency scene can become chaotic: CPR, medications, monitor interpretation, family members, police officers, bystanders recording, and multiple critical decisions happening at once.
In real-world EMS, manual ventilation and airway management tools need to be simple, practical, and easy to use under pressure.
That is why SafeBVM developed Sotair® for field use and SotairIQ™ for BVM ventilation training. Providers can practice manual ventilation skills with SotairIQ™, then use Sotair® in the field when the scene is loud, fast, and unpredictable.
Watch the full video on the SafeBVM YouTube channel.

04/25/2026

How were you taught to ventilate when you first entered EMS?
EMS Lt. Ryan Lavender from Hoover Fire Department reflects on how he was originally taught to approach ventilation — and how that thinking has changed over time.
Were you taught that faster breathing was better? Or was your training different?

04/24/2026

In low-frequency, high-acuity calls, stress changes performance.

EMS Lt. Ryan Lavender from the Hoover Fire Department shares a real-world observation: compressions often get too fast, ventilations get too fast, and even trained providers may squeeze the bag valve mask more aggressively than intended.

Manual ventilation during CPR and cardiac arrest requires more than good intentions. It requires awareness, repetition, feedback, and control.

SafeBVM is focused on improving manual ventilation education with Sotair® and SotairIQ™ — helping providers better understand flow, pressure, inspiratory time, rate, and volume.

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