Soft robot may change how first responders save lives

Soft robot may change how first responders save lives

A new UCSB device makes opening an airway faster and safer

by Kurt Knutsson
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When someone stops breathing, the clock starts ticking. First responders often need to get air into the lungs fast, and one of the most reliable ways is to slide a tube into the windpipe. This process, called intubation, keeps the airway open so oxygen can flow again. Here’s the catch: intubation is incredibly hard. Even trained doctors can struggle, and every extra second puts the patient at greater risk. Now, researchers at UC Santa Barbara have designed a soft robotic device that could change how first responders handle these emergencies. It helps guide the breathing tube into place quickly, safely, and with far less training than traditional methods.

 

 

 

Soft robotic device that could change how first responders handle these emergencies.

Credit: USCB

 

Why breathing tubes are so tough to place

Our bodies are built to keep food and foreign objects out of the lungs. A small flap called the epiglottis blocks the windpipe during swallowing, and the path into the trachea is narrow and curved. To get around these obstacles, current tools are rigid. Medics have to lift the epiglottis with a metal scope and carefully angle the tube forward. If it slips into the esophagus instead, oxygen goes to the stomach instead of the lungs. “Traditional tools must be stiff so you can push them, and they only turn by pressing on sensitive tissue,” explained Elliot Hawkes, professor of mechanical engineering at UCSB.

Illustration shows how the intubation device is used.

 

How the soft robot works

The new system, called the soft robotic intubation system (SRIS), takes a gentler approach. First, a curved guide sits at the back of the throat. Then a soft inflatable tube slowly unrolls from the inside out as it advances. Instead of being forced in, it naturally follows the right path into the windpipe. This reduces friction, lowers the risk of injury, and adapts to different body shapes automatically. “This growing paradigm naturally accounts for minor variations in anatomy,” said lead author David Haggerty, a recent UCSB Ph.D. graduate.

 

What the tests show

The results are eye-opening:

  • Experts had a 100% success rate.
  • Paramedics and EMTs reached a 96% success rate with just five minutes of training.
  • Non-experts placed the tube in an average of 21 seconds, less than half the time needed with advanced video laryngoscopes.

 

Why this could save more lives

Millions of emergency intubations happen in the U.S. each year. Many take place in chaotic, low-light, or stressful situations where current tools don’t always work. A device that makes the process easier could be a lifesaver for:

  • Paramedics at accident scenes
  • Military medics in combat zones
  • Doctors in hospitals with limited equipment

The UCSB team is now preparing for clinical trials and FDA approval.

Ambulances on standby at a hospital

 

What this means for you

If this device lives up to its early promise, it could mean that more patients survive emergencies where breathing stops. For families, it means a higher chance that first responders can keep loved ones alive until they reach the hospital. For medics, it offers a safer, faster tool when seconds truly matter.

 

 

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Kurt’s key takeaways

Breathing is life, yet securing an airway is one of the toughest jobs in emergency care. This soft robotic system may help turn a high-risk procedure into something more predictable and safe. While more testing is still ahead, the early data shows how robotics could make a lifesaving difference for patients everywhere.

Would you feel more confident knowing first responders in your community had access to this kind of lifesaving robot? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below. 

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1 comment

James L. October 3, 2025 - 12:24 pm

This is exciting. The reported success rates for physicians, EMT’s and paramedics is astounding. Especially with the first responders receiving only 5 minutes of training. Time spent in training these folks will be significantly reduced allowing them to hone other critical skills and/or learn new ones. Look forward to additional articles as it affects advances in Emergency Medicine.

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