The Press

Heat cameras could be part of daily life

- Lee Kenny

Imagine entering a supermarke­t or boarding a bus and having a thermal camera scan your body temperatur­e for signs of Covid-19.

That may be the new normal as New Zealand looks to ensure carriers are detected and the virus is not spread throughout the community.

A Christchur­ch care home has become the first in the country to install a thermal detection camera to scan people before they enter and other trials are set to take place in shops and offices.

One company leading the way is Christchur­ch-based manufactur­er 2040.

The technology it uses was developed by not-for-profit organisati­on the Cacophony Project, which aims to save New Zealand birds by recording the movements of predators.

Following the outbreak of Covid-19, the team has adapted the software to help fight the virus.

‘‘One of our engineers said we could use this to detect people with elevated body temperatur­es,’’ 2040 managing director Shaun Ryan said.

‘‘The default threshold is anything above 37.4 degrees Celsius, we’re labelling that as someone having a fever. It’s not a diagnostic tool, it’s a screening tool so we can say to people, ‘go get your temperatur­e taken with a medical device’.’’

He said the threshold can be lowered or raised depending on the ‘‘risk profile’’ of the situation.

‘‘It’s a thermal camera so it measures temperatur­e with every pixel so the basic concept was pretty simple but there was a lot of fine-tuning to make the calibratio­n work.’’

The cameras could eventually become as commonplac­e as CCTV or airport security scanners, Ryan said.

‘‘I think there’s the potential for a lot of organisati­ons to use it to scan their staff and potentiall­y customers and I think it’s something people are going to see more and more.’’

 ??  ?? People could soon be scanned as they enter a workplace or business.
People could soon be scanned as they enter a workplace or business.

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