Otago Daily Times

Specialist­s develop new ventilator hood

- JACOB MCSWEENY jacob.mcsweeny@odt.co.nz

A DUNEDINMAD­E ventilator hood that could be a major support for hospitals managing Covid19 outbreaks is now being manufactur­ed.

Former Scott Tech chief executive Chris Hopkins has helped get a range of specialist­s together — engineers, clinicians and government officials — to design and create the ventilator hoods.

The hoods help patients breathe and can prevent them needing full ventilatio­n.

The hope is that the hoods will be able to eliminate the need for a ventilator and shorten the time people are in hospital.

Mr Hopkins began pulling a team together to build the hoods after a call for help from Trade and Export Growth Minister David Parker in March.

They have gone from early design and developmen­t at the beginning of April to a prototype in May, largely made from 3Dprinted parts.

Two hundred of the ventilator hoods are being manufactur­ed in bunches of 50 by SouthMED Ltd, the company set up by Mr Hopkins and his cohort.

He said they were starting to gear up for ‘‘bulk assembly’’.

The plan now is for some of the 200 hoods to be given to hospital staff to get familiar with them.

‘‘They’re primarily used in the Northern Hemisphere. We’re not as familiar with them . . . certainly in Australia, New Zealand around this area.’’

SouthMED was in discussion­s with the Ministry of Health’s procuremen­t arm, New Zealand Health Partnershi­ps about getting the hoods sent to district health boards.

‘‘They’re quite keen . . . for some local supply because of the supply constraint­s everybody saw when the pandemic hit.’’

Covid19 is under control in New Zealand, but Mr Hopkins said clinicians he had spoken with said there was still a need for respirator­y support devices like the hood.

Regulatory approvals were needed, including internatio­nal certificat­ion before the hoods could be bought and used on patients here.

‘‘That’s sort of the one last piece of the puzzle for us.’’

The team leading the developmen­t and the creation of the hoods included mechanical engineers Mark Seaton and Richard Aimers. Helping with design and protoyping processes was Otago Polytechni­c product design senior lecturer Andrew Wallace and technician and mechanical engineer William Early.

The build of the hood involves several local companies. Covermarq is making the plastic for the hood, JTech Plastics is helping with the injection moulds and United Machinists helped with the seal at the base of the hood.

 ?? PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN ?? Respiratio­n product aspiration­s . . . Mark Seaton, Chris Hopkins, William Early and Andrew Wallace look on as Richard Aimers tries on a ventilator hood made in Dunedin.
PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN Respiratio­n product aspiration­s . . . Mark Seaton, Chris Hopkins, William Early and Andrew Wallace look on as Richard Aimers tries on a ventilator hood made in Dunedin.

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