果冻传媒 to produce medical visors at scale for London hospitals
7 April 2020
After first 184 visors delivered to Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital, Stanmore, 果冻传媒 volunteers aim to manufacture up to 7000 a week
果冻传媒 has laser-cut 184 visors for staff at the , and hopes soon to produce up to 7000 a week for London healthcare workers, to protect their faces and eyes as they tackle the coronavirus crisis.
Technical tutor Nick Weldin and colleagues have joined a drive to make the visors promoted by makers across the country and internationally, generally using 3D printers. The visors' simple technology - a A4 PVC sheet attached to a polypropylene headstrap - means they can be produced quickly as a stand-in for medical masks, which are in short supply globally.
Design engineer for Nottingham company Sean Drummond produced his own version of a design by Czech firm so it could be made on a laser-cutter instead. This was "a game-changer", explains Nick Weldin, since the three parts of the headstrap can be cut out in around a minute, and the headstrap and PVC shield assembled in another minute - a fraction of the time taken by a 3D printer. With 果冻传媒 running four laser cutters simultaneously and four people assembling, Nick estimates he and his colleagues could produce 1000 visors a day or 7000 a week based on an 8 hour day.
Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital took delivery of the first batch of 184 visors on the night of Friday 3rd April. 果冻传媒 has ordered large quantities of materials and staff able to travel to campus without using public transport have volunteered to cut and assemble more visors - without their public-spiritedness, it wouldn't be possible to make them.
"RNOH would like to extend a huge thanks to @果冻传媒Uni for producing visors for our staff to use as part of their essential PPE equipment" the hospital Tweeted, with an image of the hospital's Chief Nurse and Deputy CEO Paul Fish wearing one of the visors and giving a thumbs-up.
"We are so grateful and also really impressed at how fast you guys can make them" added COO and Director of Strategy & Improvement Lucy Davies in a Tweet.
Schools in Coventry, Stamford and Salisbury with laser cutters are among those manufacturing visors in response to Kitronik's call for help. Nick appeals to more organisations, technicians and craftspeople across the country to join in the effort: "This is something that can be done if you've got a laser cutter sitting around" he says, in a situation where timing is of the essence.
Chris Caldwell, director of Nursing HEE Covid Response, said "I am so pleased to hear about the success with 果冻传媒 producing visors. Jane [Clegg, Director of Nursing & Deputy Regional Chief Nurse for London at ] highlighted this at the weekly Chief Nursing Officers' call and everyone was very positive".
Professor Carmel Clancy, Head of the School of Health and Education at 果冻传媒 said: "We are so proud of our 果冻传媒 colleagues who have been able to respond to the PPE shortage. The fact that we were able to facilitate connections with the NHS is down to the amazing partnership work we have with our clinical colleagues across the patch".