Английская Википедия:Gerald McGinnis

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox person Gerald Edward McGinnis (March 17, 1934 Шаблон:Spnd January 25, 2024; also known as Jerry McGinnis) was an American inventor and businessman who founded Respironics, a medical device company which sold the first mass-produced CPAP machines.[1][2]

Early life

McGinnis was born on March 17, 1934, in Ottawa, Illinois to Joseph McGinnis and Dora Gress. He was the youngest of seven children and his father worked in factories. At a young age, McGinnis washed bakery trays to earn money and tinkered with household appliances and fixed old cars and bicycles.[1]

McGinnis attended Illinois Valley Community College to study mechanical engineering and then joined the US Army, serving in the Korean War and setting up weaponry.[3][1] After leaving the US Army, he took advantage of the G.I. Bill to fund his studies, gaining a Bachelors of Science in mechanical engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in 1958.[1][4] McGinnis then moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to gain his master's degree in mechanical engineering at the University of Pittsburgh.[1]

Career

To afford his master's degree, McGinnis worked at Westinghouse Electric in a research position while completing his studies.[1] He remained at Westinghouse for eleven years, eventually becoming the manager of the bioengineering department in 1963.[4][3] McGinnis believed that the human body was like a machine which occasionally needed replacement parts.[1] As manager, he took part in research involving artificial hearts and human survival in space.[2] In 1969, McGinnis became head of the Surgical Research Department of Allegheny General Hospital, remaining in that position until 1971.[4] There, he researched replacements for the endotracheal tube, as the tight seal it created risked damaging the windpipe.[2][5]

After McGinnis left Allegheny General Hospital in 1971, he used his wife's US$7000 inheritance and US$50,000 from colleagues at hospital to found Lanz Medical Products in his house. McGinnis created ceramic anesthesia masks and tracheotomy tubes, using the kitchen oven as a kiln and the basement as a drying area.[1][3][6] McGinnis worked through the night tinkering to avoid disturbing his family and slept during daytime hours.[1][2] The company also produced cuffs for endotracheal tubes which regulated how tightly the tubes were sealed, reducing the risk of windpipe damage.[5] While working at Lanz Medical Products, McGinnis also worked at Critical Care Department at the Presbyterian-University Hospital from 1971 to 1975, participating in programs which sought medical applications for technological devices.[2][7] After five years of operation, McGinnis sold the company.[5]

In 1976, McGinnis created Respironics.[5] The company initially focused on the same products as Lanz Medical Products, namely endotracheal tubes and anesthesia masks. The company often struggled financially, frequently turning to loans from banks and private lenders.[2] After Colin Sullivan published his 1981 article on CPAP machines, Mark Sanders, a Pittsburgh pulmonologist, advised McGinnis to develop a CPAP machine for residential use.[1] In late 1984, Respironics gained approval from the Food and Drug Administration and the company released the SleepEasy the following year.[8][6] The demand these products produced was so high that distributors artificially inflated the price to keep up with supply. When one Winnipeg physician complained about the price, McGinnis travelled to Winnipeg to met the physician personally and demanded that the distributors lower the price.[1] Respironics also found commercial success in creating an anesthesia mask that was durable and leak-proof. The company was able to keep the costs down by outsourcing the labor to Hong Kong, where Hong Kong businessmen were rewarded with half of the company's stock. In 1987, a fire destroyed the company plant in Wilmerding.[6]

As the company grew, McGinnis shifted his focus away from product development and toward business affairs.[6] In 1990, he was elected to Point Park College board of directors.[9] McGinnis was an outspoken Republican; he strongly opposed capital gains taxes and believed tax cuts would help aid economic growth.[10]

Later life and legacy

After Respironics was sold to Philips in 2008, McGinnis stepped down from his leadership role at Respironics.[1] In his later years, McGinnis made many philanthropic donations to various institutions and received accolades for his work in sleep medicine.[3][2] In 2006, Allegheny General Hospital opened the Gerald McGinnis Cardiovascular institute after McGinnis made large contributions to help build it.[11] He also sponsored an endowed chair of sleep medicine at Harvard Medical School.[2][1]

When Respironics recalled its machines in 2021 due to a defect which caused noise-reducing foam to degrade and release toxic chemicals, McGinnis attributed the recall to a culture shift in the company and called it a "disappointment and embarrassment".[8]

On January 25, 2024, Gerald McGinnis died of Parkinson's disease.[1]

Awards

References

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