A documented, worldwide frustration
Hundreds of Reddit threads. Thousands of comments. No coordination, no incentive, just professionals across every specialty and continent describing the same unresolved problem. Intubation is harder than it should be.

Absolute Urgency
In critical emergencies, time is no longer a variable, it's the line between survival and irreversible brain injury. Three minutes without oxygen can mean permanent damage.
Outdated Tools
Current devices force operators to adapt tools designed for controlled environments to chaotic, high-stakes situations, far from the reality of emergency care where conditions are unpredictable and unforgiving.
Operational Limitations
Traditional videolaryngoscopes require both hands, preventing the clinician from performing critical simultaneous maneuvers like suctioning blood, stabilizing the patient, or applying external laryngeal pressure.
Every Second Counts
When breathing becomes an emergency, time is no longer a variable, it's the line between recovery and irreversible injury. The Divoscope™ delivers speed when speed saves lives.
20 Years Without Major Innovation
Intubation devices have barely evolved, forcing clinicians to adapt tools designed for controlled operating rooms to chaotic emergency environments, where conditions are unpredictable, time is critical, and failure has immediate consequences.
Innovation Plateau
Since video laryngoscopy added a camera two decades ago, the core technique has remained
unchanged, clinicians still manually navigate the tube to visualize and access the airway.
First-pass success rates for non-expert users plateau at approximately 85%, a ceiling that better optics
alone cannot break. The Divoscope is the first motorized laryngoscope, introducing motorized,
joystick-controlled tube advancement that achieved 100% first-attempt intubation
success in its initial preclinical study.*
unchanged, clinicians still manually navigate the tube to visualize and access the airway.
First-pass success rates for non-expert users plateau at approximately 85%, a ceiling that better optics
alone cannot break. The Divoscope is the first motorized laryngoscope, introducing motorized,
joystick-controlled tube advancement that achieved 100% first-attempt intubation
success in its initial preclinical study.*
*Front. Med. 13:1744451 (2026). Preclinical cadaver study, Thiel-embalmed models, n = 30 intubations.
Discover the Intubation Revolution
That Saves Lives
Learn moreClinical Impact
Feature
Standard VLs
DivoscopeTM
Motorized advancement
Single-handed operation
Pre-assembled tube system
Integrated joystick navigation
Average intubation time
35-60 sec
14.3 seconds*
First pass success rate
80-90%
100%*
*Preclinical cadaver study (Front. Med. 13:1744451, 2026)

