3D printers forge face shields for fight against the coronavirus
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[April 03, 2020]
By Nathan Frandino
SUNNYVALE, Calif. (Reuters) - Oscar Valera
likes to use 3D printers to build an assortment of crafts, but he is now
turning his hobby toward the fight against the coronavirus pandemic.
In just four days, the New Jersey high school teacher has printed and
distributed 200 face shields to medical professionals across the
country, including Florida and Texas. He is far from done.
"One woman told me what you're doing right now is giving people peace of
mind. You're probably saving lives,” said Valera, who found a shield
design posted online.
Demand for face shields, along with N95-masks and other personal
protective equipment (PPE) has skyrocketed with the surge of patients
infected with the highly contagious virus. There were more than 238,800
confirmed U.S. cases as of Thursday.
That has prompted volunteer 3D printers like Valera to step in to
support doctors, nurses and first responders, who are all in danger of
contracting the sometimes deadly illness.
Face shields help protect frontline-workers from potential
virus-containing droplets released by coughing, sneezing and other close
contact.
In Sunnyvale, California, community workspace nonprofit Maker Nexus has
been running its 13 3D printers and three laser cutters nonstop. The
company produced 1,800 masks for local hospitals and now has requests
for another 13,000.
General manager Eric Hess said 300 volunteers helped scour the internet
for raw materials to make the shields. They also reached out to
hospitals in need of PPE and printed the visors for the shields.
“They're sitting at home. They're working from home, or they've been
laid off. This is a way that they can contribute,” said Hess, whose
company uses the open-source Prusa 3D printed shield design from the
Czech Republic.
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Measurements are seen on the plastic face shield for an earlier
prototype of a 3D-printed face shield to be used by medical
professionals in the fight against coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in
Sunnyvale, California, U.S. on April 1, 2020. REUTERS/Nathan
Frandino
About 500 shields have gone to the nearby Santa Clara Valley Medical
Center (SCVMC), where officials estimate nurses use up to 15 PPE
sets over three shifts for just one patient.
Dr. Sanjay Kurani, SCVMC medical director, said as coronavirus cases
increased in the Bay Area, they quickly realized the hospital was
burning through PPE faster than it could source the equipment.
"Once we hit the surge, we could be in very critically low
supplies," Kurani said.
Elsewhere in Silicon Valley, more companies are joining in.
Fremont-based PrinterPrezz, a 3D-printing medical device contract
manufacturer that specializes in metal spinal implants, switched
production to printing PPE after getting a request from nearby
Washington Hospital Healthcare System.
Snap Lab, a unit of Snap Inc, is also producing face shields to
donate to hospitals.
In New Jersey, Valera said he will continue to do his part.
“I don’t mind doing this," Valera said. "I just hate the fact that I
have to.”
(Reporting by Nathan Frandino in Sunnyvale, California; Editing by
Aurora Ellis and Bill Berkrot)
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