Re: Sticky: Phillips Respironics recent recall notice discussion thread
Posted: Wed Jun 23, 2021 9:15 am
Are you still going to Buster Browns to have your feet shoe fit X-Rayed.
A Forum For All Things CPAP
https://www.cpaptalk.com/
Are you still going to Buster Browns to have your feet shoe fit X-Rayed.
If you use OSCAR, that may not be the best idea given the following post from apneaboard
Sleeprider Wrote:
Philips is in the driver's seat on this, and has also encrypted the data on new DS-2 machines. In my opinion, a DS 2 simply gives you a brick. From now on, you will pay your doctor for your CPAP data. If that is what you want, go get it. If you don't think that is right, get a Resmed as a replacement.
I don't know if the encryption is insurmountable, but it sure does represent a challenge. Philips official position is
This statement means they intend to deny patients access to detailed data. The data may have keys that are specific to the machine serial number or have another decryption algorithm. So far, we cannot support Philips Respironics machines in Oscar until that problem is solved. It would be nice to think we could call on Philips for help on this, but considering their obvious efforts to prevent patients from seeing their own data, and making them rely in a DME or physician, I'll let you calculate the odds. Oscar is a non-profit, volunteer effort to enable patients to access their data. Philips is setting an encryption on new machines to prevent this. How much effort would you suggest the volunteers expend to help Philips ? People that want data without paying doctor fees or other access, will probably look elsewhere, and should.Philips has determined that as a company we must encrypt data for privacy and security reasons. When writing a prescription file to an SD Card using Care Orchestrator, such a file will be created for a specific target device that can decrypt the prescription and other files that were created by Care Orchestrator
Yikes!!GrumpyHere wrote: ↑Wed Jun 23, 2021 9:20 amIf you use OSCAR, that may not be the best idea given the following post from apneaboard
Sleeprider Wrote:
Philips is in the driver's seat on this, and has also encrypted the data on new DS-2 machines. In my opinion, a DS 2 simply gives you a brick. From now on, you will pay your doctor for your CPAP data. If that is what you want, go get it. If you don't think that is right, get a Resmed as a replacement.I don't know if the encryption is insurmountable, but it sure does represent a challenge. Philips official position is
This statement means they intend to deny patients access to detailed data. The data may have keys that are specific to the machine serial number or have another decryption algorithm. So far, we cannot support Philips Respironics machines in Oscar until that problem is solved. It would be nice to think we could call on Philips for help on this, but considering their obvious efforts to prevent patients from seeing their own data, and making them rely in a DME or physician, I'll let you calculate the odds. Oscar is a non-profit, volunteer effort to enable patients to access their data. Philips is setting an encryption on new machines to prevent this. How much effort would you suggest the volunteers expend to help Philips ? People that want data without paying doctor fees or other access, will probably look elsewhere, and should.Philips has determined that as a company we must encrypt data for privacy and security reasons. When writing a prescription file to an SD Card using Care Orchestrator, such a file will be created for a specific target device that can decrypt the prescription and other files that were created by Care Orchestrator
So far I haven't seen any reports from the OSCAR development team pointing to the AirSense 11 data being a problem and I know they have the data. So we can sit back and cross our fingers on that one.
Yes, in fact BlueDragon has indicated it's going very well on supporting the AirSense 11.Pugsy wrote: ↑Wed Jun 23, 2021 12:33 pmSo far I haven't seen any reports from the OSCAR development team pointing to the AirSense 11 data being a problem and I know they have the data. So we can sit back and cross our fingers on that one.
As for Respironics encrypting the data....can't say as it surprises me and I wouldn't be surprised if down the road the other machine manufacturers did something similar.
BlueDragon wrote: ↑Mon Jun 07, 2021 12:09 pmWe are making great progress on adding support for the AirSense 11 since ResMed has apparently made only minor changes to the data files. The DS2 presents a much knottier problem as decoding the data is more difficult with the changes that Philips Respironics made to the data.
This is good to hear, for future ResMed 11 users...Dog Slobber wrote: ↑Wed Jun 23, 2021 12:49 pmYes, in fact BlueDragon has indicated it's going very well on supporting the AirSense 11.Pugsy wrote: ↑Wed Jun 23, 2021 12:33 pmSo far I haven't seen any reports from the OSCAR development team pointing to the AirSense 11 data being a problem and I know they have the data. So we can sit back and cross our fingers on that one.
As for Respironics encrypting the data....can't say as it surprises me and I wouldn't be surprised if down the road the other machine manufacturers did something similar.BlueDragon wrote: ↑Mon Jun 07, 2021 12:09 pmWe are making great progress on adding support for the AirSense 11 since ResMed has apparently made only minor changes to the data files. The DS2 presents a much knottier problem as decoding the data is more difficult with the changes that Philips Respironics made to the data.
The five-year replacement is part of the specs. Just remember if the machine stops functioning while you are asleep you are breathing in the air you just exhaled so you won't be getting air with very much oxygen in it. I for one would rather replace a machine while it is still fully functional rather than wait until it dies on me.HairyReasoner wrote: ↑Mon Jun 21, 2021 6:37 pm
If it's still working within specs and doing the job it's supposed to do, and I'm still happy with it, why should I have to buy a new one just because it's reached a particular age? Again, what's the justification for replacing it? Just because it's medical equipment? Then, why not two years, or one year? It seems it should be my choice as to when I want to replace it.
I'm not saying to disregard the age. As your unit gets older you need to think of a backup. That may involve buying a new machine or using a previous machine. Right now, I'm using an M series that was replaced by a System One that was replaced by the Dreamstation.
I have my machine stop functioning on me while I sleep sometimes. It happens every time there's a power outage at night when I'm sleeping. I wake up to that momentary loss of air until the flap in my mask opens and lets back in air.lvthunder wrote: ↑Wed Jun 23, 2021 5:47 pm
The five-year replacement is part of the specs. Just remember if the machine stops functioning while you are asleep you are breathing in the air you just exhaled so you won't be getting air with very much oxygen in it. I for one would rather replace a machine while it is still fully functional rather than wait until it dies on me.
You might be a perfect candidate for those lawyers who are looking at starting a potential class-action lawsuit. They were mentioned and their website provided earlier in this thread. The fact that you actually have a historic CT scan from 2018 and now have an abnormal CT scan - who knows why/what may have changed.tisket wrote: ↑Wed Jun 23, 2021 8:03 pmAs chance would have it, I had a CT scan of my abdomen the week the recall was announced. I couldn't help but notice the brand on the CT scanner - Philips.
One of the findings was "Pleuropericardial thickening with bibasilar linear scarring or atelectasis."
I had a similar scan in early 2018, and "lung bases are clear" was in that report.
I started using a PR System 1 in January 2017, till late 2020.
This may of course be coincidence and the cause of the lung scarring/collapsed lobes may not be related to the machine. I suspect a number of continued doctor visits and tests are in front of me to find out. The scans were not for lung related issues, if they were, they would have been chest scans. (I am pretty sure those are now in my future.) However, I have no intention of letting the System 1 out of my hands for a repair until I find out exactly what is going on. The inside of that machine may contain critical evidence, legal and medical, of what is happening to me. And I certainly won't open it myself, lest it be tainted for evidentiary purposes.
This is a rather odd situation, where a company which may be liable for causing great injury, may be asking people to send back their machines for repairs - which would remove all evidence of foam degradation from the patient's control forever, quite likely before the patient even realized they had an injury, and with the patient having no idea of the state of the foam at the time they sent the machine back. I had no idea I had lung damage going on, I assumed my frequent coughs (for which I've often seen doctors, who prescribed the usual) were related to allergies. I was scanned for something else and the lung finding was serendipitous. Might have been years before lung problems caused me to see a doctor about that, and the recall by then would have been long in the past.
Think twice before sending your machine back to Philips, especially if you have another machine you can use.