Citation From the April 2, 2020, edition of Fox News’ America’s Newsroom

ED HENRY (CO-ANCHOR): So let's just break that down. How easy would it be to remedy that? Say a hospital gets 100 of these, and you say there’s a battery problem. Can they fix that relatively easily? In terms of getting a stand, are stands readily available, could this be fixed?

TOM KALLSTROM (CEO, AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR RESPIRATORY CARE): Sure. In fact, I talked to a colleague of mine at New York Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist today. And what they've done, they've been able to get stands in, he’s had them overnighted to the hospital. As for a dead battery, I imagine they could just be charged up, and then they should be good to go. If not, you’d have to somehow get batteries to back them up.

HENRY: Well, that’s --

KALLSTROM: So for me, the --

HENRY: I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to interrupt you, but that’s why it’s important to have you on. Because the initial headlines suggest this is a real problem. And there can be some problems. But you’re suggesting, given your insight and long-time knowledge, that these can be fixed, this can be remedied?

KALLSTROM: Yeah, I think so. And I don't know to the degree of which this is happening. Like I said, we're monitoring that. I can tell you that we as an association have been training up respiratory therapists for several years on how to use these ventilators for something like this.