Otago Daily Times

Yes minister: the response for ventilator hoods

- JACOB MCSWEENY

WHILE Chris Hopkins was walking the Hump Ridge Track in March he got a text message from a Cabinet minister.

‘‘I got this strange text from Minister [David] Parker.

‘‘He sent me a photo of the Italian [ventilator] hood . . . I thought it was a bit of a scam.’’ It was not.

Mr Hopkins — the former chief executive of Scott Tech — was asked by Mr Parker if he could help get ventilator hoods into New Zealand.

‘‘[He] was keen to see if I could help him find some way to get them either into New Zealand or manufactur­e them here.’’

Mr Hopkins understood the Government had put in an order for some ventilator hoods but ‘‘had not been able to get hold of them’’.

Dunedin Hospital ICU clinical director Dr Craig Carr had told Mr Parker about the success of the ventilator hoods in treating Covid19 patients in Europe — as well as the lack of the products in New Zealand.

‘‘It helps them breathe . . . meaning they don’t have to go into full ventilatio­n,’’ Mr Hopkins said.

‘‘For the ventilator [patients] have to be sedated and have a tube stuck down their throat — whereas these things enable them to be treated prior and hopefully eliminatin­g that and shortening their stay in hospital.’’

A few days after first talking to the minister about the project, Mr Hopkins spoke to Otago Polytechni­c about using its facilities and rounded up a team of exScott Tech staff and others in related fields who were keen to have a go at producing ventilator hoods here.

Funding through some philanthro­pists had already been organised by the minister.

‘‘Early design and developmen­t was completed within the first weeks of Level 4 lockdown and a prototype of predominan­tly 3D printed parts was developed and built,’’ Mr Hopkins said.

The funding then allowed the team to bring the venture to life with the ability to manufactur­e tools for production, he said.

A company called SouthMED Ltd was formed and they began developing 200 ventilator­s.

A final product was now close to being production­ready, Mr Hopkins said.

‘‘It has been an amazing story of individual profession­als in our community coming together to get the job done quickly by combining their unique skills, tools, knowledge and networks.’’

The team that had pulled it together included clinicians Dr Carr and Dr Matthew Leaper, anaestheti­c technician Bill Clarke, engineers Mark Seaton and Richard Aimers, product designers Andrew Wallace and William Early, scientist Dr Barbara Webster and businessma­n Roger Farley.

The team was able to use Otago Polytechni­c’s rapidproto­typing facilities to work on product concepts and prototypes.

 ?? PHOTOS: SUPPLIED ?? Dr Craig Carr models an earlier SouthMED ventilator hood prototype. Inset: The latest prototype ventilator hood.
PHOTOS: SUPPLIED Dr Craig Carr models an earlier SouthMED ventilator hood prototype. Inset: The latest prototype ventilator hood.
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