The all-female Afghan Robotics Team, which has won international
awards for its robots, started work in March on an open-source,
low-cost ventilator as the coronavirus pandemic hit the war-torn
nation.
It took the team almost four months to finalise the ventilator,
which is partly based on a Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT) design, and they received guidance from experts at Harvard
University.
The device is easy to carry, can run on battery power for 10 hours,
and costs roughly $700 to produce, compared with the $20,000 price
of a traditional ventilator.
"We are delighted that we were able to take our first step in the
field of medicine and to be able to serve the people in this area as
well. All members of our team feel happy because after months of
hard work, we were able to achieve this result,” Faruqi told
Reuters.
Although the ventilator still has to undergo final testing from
health authorities before it can be used, officials welcome it in a
country with only 800 ventilators to treat the fast-growing number
of coronavirus cases in a health system damaged by decades of war.
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Health Ministry spokesman Akmal Samsor said once the ventilators were approved
they would be rolled out in Afghan hospitals and the design shared with the
World Health Organization.
"We appreciate the initiative and creativity in Afghanistan's health
sector...after they are approved, we will use these ventilators and we are
determined to contract with companies so we can also export them," he said.
Afghanistan has recorded around 35,500 COVID-19 cases and 1,181 deaths, though
experts warn the true count is probably far higher due to low testing rates.
(Reporting by Storay Karimi, Jalil Rezaee and Orooj Hakimi; additional reporting
by Hameed Farzad and Sayed Hassib; writing by Charlotte Greenfield, editing by
Ed Osmond)
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