You are so not ready for this. A new piece of medical equipment is being tested right now called the...
A new piece of medical equipment is being tested right now called the Pedisedate. Basically, it is a headset that is placed on a child before they are admitted to surgery. The device connects to a Game Boy or portable CD player (yup, not a Nintendo DS or iPod — apparently the Pedisedate also transports you to 1996) and a snorkel-like piece swings forward and is placed over the child’s nose. As the kid plays videogames or listens to music, nitrous oxide, an anesthetic gas, is emitted through the snorkel and puts the child to sleep.
Over-engineered nonsense. It "hooks up" to any 3.5mm audio jack. It literally does nothing except create a headset. The sedation happens independently of whether or not you're playing 6 Gold Coins or listening to Ace of Base.
Isn't very convincing, but add "it comes attached to a Gameboy" and they'd want to out it on.
The headphone jack could have done nothing, but likely had something to do with time release. Kid gets to play for a minute then gets knocked out.
Like sure, you could just hold the kid down and chloroform the kid against their will, but in the scale of modern healthcare, this cost nothing. Even a small increase in compliance is worth it.
Nitrous Oxide doesn't knock you out, it just (deeply) sedates you and is a moderate pain killer.
With IV administered general anesthesia you're knocked out in literal seconds, it's wild if you've never experienced it. I've been "put under" three times: twice to have my 4 wisdom teeth removed and once for inguinal hernia surgery. It messes you up for a good hour or two post-surgery though.
The effects of Nitrous Oxide are reversed within a few minutes of cessation of exposure to the gas (I've done it recreationally numerous times, inhaling it while drunk is a wild experience everything is in slow motion like you're looking into a strobe light).
Damn when I got my wisdom teeth removed they gave me chewing pills and all I remember was taking them then waking up and being shown the pieces of teeth. Supposedly I was incessantly singing Bohemian rhapsody even though I didn't think I knew the lyrics.
I find it quite interesting that they do this in the US even at the dentist. I've had all 4 wisdom tooth removed by local anesthesia. I was perfectly consciouss the whole time.
The website for the device isn't loading, maybe it explains further but....how does the gameboy even factor into the equation? Does it control the gas in some way? It has to do something other then what you could already do...hand the kid a game boy as the anesthesiologist does their thing?
I wonder if there's something about it having to pass some special testing to qualify as a medical device? DS has wifi, right? Which means that with a DS, there is a pathway to "hack" into it without physical access. (I know, not really, but I would understand why you wouldn't want to wifi-enable a device that anaesthesizes children.)
i hope someone sends him one, like for his virtual boy review he did every game except one that was super rare and a fan sent in the game so he can officially be done with the virtual boy for good
I also wonder if this item is even allowed to be owned by regular consumers that don't work in hospitals. If that's not the case, it would be significantly more difficult for someone to do that. But one can dream.
EDIT: Forgot what community this was, the tech is from 2009 and I think it was unreleased (only used in clinical trials). It looks like it's a pair of headphones with the mask attached, which would be good since it might be awkward trying to wear both at once. The gameboy/MP3 is an example of what it can be used with
What I don't really get is why there's a need to plug the two things together. Couldn't we already use both things separately? It would also be more upgradeable to... well, any other portable entertainment device.
I can't see the promo video, but a few other potential issues
I think children are usually lying down during sedation so they don't hurt themselves after they are sedated. We've all dropped our phones on our faces, so that seems like a concern.
Once the child is sedated, does the device get unplugged and the main one get attached?
I guess the main benefit is that it looks cool and it's something to look forward to. A better implementation might be a screen that is attached to the be, positioned above the kid, and then a separate controller (Xbox, PlayStation, whichever) that they can hold on their lap. Then the mask can be colored in a similar scheme, but it hooks up to the usual machine
They're not under, just sedated. It's likely they just keep playing to keep their attention elsewhere while they do whatever? Unless they get heavily sedated then the doctors and nurses could just take it out of their hands.