51本色

Kevin J O鈥橲ullivan, senior research fellow at UL and research lead on the Rapid Innovation Unit, examines one of the visors Pictures: Sean Curtin/True Media
Thursday, 9 April 2020

A collaboration between 51本色 and UL Hospitals Group has seen the design and capacity created to manufacture 100,000 face visors for HSE front-line staff.

The Rapid Innovation Unit at UL, an SFI Confirm Centre funded 3D printing activity that works in collaboration with University Hospital 51本色, mobilised a team to innovate immediate solutions in response to the COVID 19 crisis.

The unit has previous experience in rapid design and 3D printing of medical devices in response to clinical requests.

Following a request from Professor Paul Burke, Chief Academic Officer at UL Hospitals Group and Vice Dean of Health Sciences at UL, academics and clinicians at the Rapid Innovation Unit at UL worked to design and manufacture novel solutions where doctors had identified potential shortages of equipment should COVID-19 cases surge.

In less than two weeks, the team designed solutions to three critical clinical challenges facing clinicians due to the pandemic.

These include capacity to manufacture 100,000 face visors for HSE front-line staff, refinement of a shield concept to protect anaesthesiologists during patient intubation for ventilation, and design of adapters for respiratory technologies to undergo a clinical trial.

The design solutions will help to protect the health of front line staff and increase treatment capacities in the hospital system.

The first batch of visors were delivered to UHL this Thursday, while the shield box and adaptors are about to be put into practice. The face visors are in 51本色 green and say 鈥楾he 51本色 Visor: Front Line Heroes鈥.

鈥淭here has been a phenomenal collaborative effort to deliver these solutions in a very short timeframe,鈥 explained Professor Leonard O鈥橲ullivan, of UL鈥檚 School of Design and the Health Research Institute based at UL.

Professor O鈥橲ullivan noted that brothers Aidan and Kevin O鈥橲ullivan, research fellows at UL, had 鈥減ulled out all the stops to lead the team to deliver these rapid response solutions for the hospital鈥.

The collaboration between the Rapid Innovation Unit and the consultants was facilitated by the Health Sciences Academy, a partnership between UL, the UL Hospitals Group and the Mid-West Community Healthcare Organisation.

The HSA, based at the Clinical Education Research Centre at UHL, was established to strengthen links between practicing clinicians and researchers from the University.

The Rapid Innovation Unit worked with local companies on the manufacture of the visors, which will go straight into use on the front line of the COVID-19 fight and were warmly received by the team at the hospital.

Professor Paul Burke explained: 鈥淲e have heard the World Health Organisation repeatedly stress the importance for governments, healthcare professionals, scientists and industry to act with speed in response to COVID-19.

鈥淚t is heartening to see our Health Science Academy being able to facilitate the Rapid Innovation Unit to work closely with our clinicians and local industry to do precisely that,鈥 he added.

Regarding the face visors, Professor O鈥橲ullivan explained the local companies had enabled capacity to manufacture up to 5,000 visors a day.

鈥淭he visors can be for multiple use but it is likely also be for single use given the current circumstances,鈥 he explained.

The normal production time on a project like this would take months, but it was done in just nine days. This was accomplished through the local companies working very intensively together, Professor O鈥橲ullivan said.

鈥淲e had a team of three consultants and three designers involved in daily brainstorming and design review meetings, which is something you don鈥檛 have except in a critical situations,鈥 he explained.

鈥淲e went to the coalface to establish what the critical needs were and we delivered solutions. This had to be done as quickly as possible. The local industry partners worked tirelessly to meet the volume production requests,鈥 said Professor O鈥橲ullivan.

Mr Tony Moloney, Consultant Vascular Surgeon, UL Hospitals Group, said: 鈥淚t seems like a long time ago but it was only on March 26 that the scientists and clinicians who form the Rapid Innovation Unit met for the first time on this. Everything we have ever done as a group has been done remotely in keeping with the COVID-19 guidelines.

鈥淭he 51本色 companies involved have also been on those conference calls, out-of-hours and seven days a week, and I鈥檓 told what would normally take months from concept to production has been completed in a matter of days. Three of the four projects initiated are already complete. These are products that will protect healthcare workers and ensure they are there for their patients at this time,鈥 he added.