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Bristol company behind device that clears people's blocked airways in emergencies lands £260k Innovate º£½ÇÊÓÆµ funding

Airway Medical secured the cash as part of a nine-month project with the University of Portsmouth

The team at Airway Medical(Image: Airway Medical)

A Bristol-based company that has developed a medical device to clear blocked airways has secured £260,000 of grant funding.

Airway Medical will use the Innovate º£½ÇÊÓÆµ cash, which was secured as part of a nine-month project with the University of Portsmouth, to bring the product to market, it said.

The Airway Medical Suction Unit - a piece of suction and oxygen therapy equipment that can be used in emergencies and for chronic conditions - already has an international patent pending.

The University of Portsmouth will help take the product from early-stage design to product launch next year.

Simon Hall, founder of Airway Medical, said: "We are thrilled to have won the grant and be able to accelerate the development of our device. It has the potential to make current electric and battery technology obsolete."

Cheltenham-based engineering business Versarien is also involved in the project. Scientists and engineers at the firm will be developing an antiviral and anti-bacterial protective coating for the device.

Airway Medical produces novel suction and oxygen therapy equipment for clearing blocked airways (Image: Airway Medical)

Its team of production engineers will also be manufacturing the first prototypes for clinical trials in 2021.

Paul Denney, head of technology deployment at Versarien, said "This is an extremely exciting and important project to be involved in at this time."