The Mercury News

3D printers

- Contact Emily DeRuy at 408-920-5077.

It's not just makers in the area offering to help. Bloom Energy, the San Jose-based green energy company, has refurbishe­d a stockpile of broken ventilator­s sent by the federal government and sent them to Los Angeles, an area hit hard by the deadly virus. HP and IBM have donated masks and Lumileds, a lighting company, has contribute­d more than 1,000 respirator­s.

“The tech community has risen to meet this crisis together, donating critically needed resources to combat the COVID-19 pandemic,” Carl Guardino, CEO of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group, said in a statement.

Already, Maker Nexus has been inundated with 13,000 requests for its face shields, Hess said. But even with about 300 people volunteeri­ng their help, and in some cases the use of their 3D printers at home, the nonprofit can produce only 500-1,000 shields a day at the moment.

“The scope of the problem was way bigger than we could handle ourselves,” Hess said.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has rushed to bring supplies to the state, saying California needs an eye-popping billion gloves, hundreds of millions of masks and gowns, and thousands of ventilator­s, even turning to Tesla CEO Elon Musk for help producing more of the breathing devices. But nurses across the Bay Area are staging protests, saying they lack enough protective gear and accusing hospitals of being ill-prepared to respond the crisis.

On Wednesday, engineer and 3D printing hobbyist Bill Wang pulled up to deliver a box of dozens of the adjustable straps that go into the shields that he'd manufactur­ed at home. His friend is a nurse, Wang said, and didn't have access to a shield. He wanted to do something and saw a

Facebook post calling for volunteers.

“Every little thing helps,” the Union City resident, who was on his way to bring groceries to his parents nearby, said. “I think these guys are great.”

Sanjay Kurani, medical director at Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, agreed.

The shields, he said, help protect doctors and nurses from disease-carrying droplets while they're treating patients who may have the coronaviru­s, and crucially, can be easily disinfecte­d and reused. Each patient, he said, can require medical workers to use up to 15 sets of PPE.

Though the hospital is still doing OK on supplies, he said, “what we want is a good stockpile in case we get into a surge situation.”

Getting supplies through normal avenues, Kurani said, has been difficult, so Silicon Valley has provided a lifeline — one that he hopes will continue into the future.

“This could be a potential brand-new supply chain for us,” he said. “It's a great symbiotic relationsh­ip.”

He thanked the nonprofit and volunteers for stepping forward and said their efforts in the face of the virus were boosting morale among nurses and doctors on the front lines.

“What is driving a lot of the fear is the uncertaint­y,” Kurani said. “We're not going to beat a disease through fear.”

Already, Hess said, Maker Nexus is looking at what other needs it can help fulfill, from respirator­s to masks.

“You have a huge wealth of talent here,” he said.

Michael Elliott, chief operating officer of Valley Medical Center Foundation, echoed the doctor, calling the work “a huge testament to that spirit” of innovation in Silicon Valley.

“This is a crisis we will get through together,” Elliott said. “It's an incredible communityw­ide effort.”

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