The Scotsman

Inverness inventors kit out hospitals with quick-to-replicate face masks

- By HANNAH BURLEY

Two Inverness companies are teaming up to meet the country’s urgent need for personal protective equipment (PPE).

Aseptium, a medical decontamin­ation equipment specialist, and tech consultanc­y 4c Engineerin­g, both based at Highlands and Islands Enterprise’s Solasta House, will produce 1,000 “innovative” face shields to help protect local doctors and nurses during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The companies collaborat­ed on “Project Corran” – taking the name of the Gaelic for crescent, the shape of the face shield when viewed from above – to design an effective product that could be robust, secure, comfortabl­e and rapidly manufactur­ed in bulk.

The first 200 units of a 1,000unit order have now been delivered to Raigmore Hospital in Inverness, after a prototype face shield was tested by intensive care and infection control staff last week.

Aseptium and 4c Engineerin­g have made the design, which does not require 3D printing, freely available, along with full manufactur­ing guidance. The companies request only that the design is credited, modified designs have an equally open license and that manufactur­e is notfor-profit.

Wider adoption is already underway, as Lochgilphe­adbased Midton Engineerin­g has taken the design, had it approved by hospitals in Oban and Mid Argyll and is now moving into manufactur­e.

Peter Macdonald, director of 4c Engineerin­g said: “Although national procuremen­t of PPE has been progressin­g at pace, we were able to ensure that the ICU in Raigmore, our local hospital, was well provided with the first 1,000 Corran face-shields and as we’ve made [the design] open-source we hope that the lessons we’ve learned can be applied by makers across the country and beyond.”

 ??  ?? 0 Pawel de Sternberg Stojalowsk­i in a Corran shield
0 Pawel de Sternberg Stojalowsk­i in a Corran shield

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