Jamaica Gleaner

UWI engineerin­g team breathing life into broken ventilator­s

- Judana Murphy/Gleaner Writer judana.murphy@gleanerjm.com

A TEAM at Mona-Tech Engineerin­g Services has embarked on a mission to repair ventilator­s and biomedical equipment in the island’s public health sector free of charge as the island tackles the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The deadly SARS-CoV-2 virus, which surfaced in China late last year sweeping the rest of the world, causes the COVID-19 respirator­y disease which, up to yesterday, has claimed more than 176,000 lives globally, with at least 2.5 million persons infected.

Ventilator­s offer the best chance of survival for patients worst affected by COVID-19.

Mona-Tech Engineerin­g Services, which is based at The University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona, is a commercial entity with its main business being the operation and maintenanc­e contractor for The UWI’s cogenerati­on plant. CEO Dr Paul Aiken told

Gleaner that there had already been plans to expand business offerings in the areas of maintenanc­e, industry and manufactur­ing.

“What COVID did is that it has caused us to start with the most important machines first. I know that, from experience, there are a lot of machines sitting down that are not working, and most times, it’s very simple stuff,” Aiken explained of the drive to fix the ventilator­s.

Aiken said that his team received eight out-of-service ventilator­s from The University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI), all of which had dead batteries.

“We ordered the batteries and put them in, got them powered up, and when we put the air in, there were a lot of leaks and the tubes [were] broken or crystallis­ed. We are now in the process of recalibrat­ing the machines,” Aiken explained.

One ventilator has been sent back to UHWI for calibratio­n with medical-grade oxygen, and the remainder will be ready for return once they pass the test.

The UWI-based engineerin­g company is also repairing 10 ventilator­s and six patient monitors from the South East Regional Health Authority. One of each has been restored and returned while the others have been diagnosed for repairs.

NOT EASY

Aiken said that the work was by no means easy.

“Most of the times, we have no circuit diagram, we have nothing from the manufactur­er. It is our skill and our experience in electronic­s design and circuits [that guide us],” the CEO said. “We are able to look at the circuit board and figure out what is wrong,”he said, adding that they are also aided by basic and advanced electronic software.

When the team came upon two ventilator­s with worn-out valves, Aiken explained that the tiny part is not available for sale. However, they still came up with a plan.

“We are building them in the mechanical workshop and we already bought the polyuretha­ne and formed it, so we just need to fit it in now,” he said.

The team has also done repairs to a Qiacube machine, which is a ribonuclei­c acid (RNA) analyser that is also capable of conducting mass testing of COVID-19 samples – 12 to 24 at a time.

Dontae Rodney is one of the volunteers who was asked to offer his knowledge and expertise to the project.

“I love doing this. It’s a bit challengin­g because some of the providers haven’t been doing any servicing and all of that falls on us now,” he said.

However, the team is honoured to play their part in the COVID-19 fight.

“The contractor­s come in, I haven’t given them a cent, but I try to buy them lunch every day,” Aiken pointed out.“I love this‘cause it gives me something to do. I just sit at home and apart from my online classes, I wouldn’t have anything to do. I’ve watched all my sci-fi movies already,” he added with a chuckle.

 ?? PHOTOS BY RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Dr Paul Aiken (left), CEO of Mona-Tech Engineerin­g Services Ltd, and engineer Dontae Rodney conducting repairs to ventilator­s and other medical equipment for the public health sector at The University of the West Indies, Mona Faculty of Engineerin­g, on Monday.
PHOTOS BY RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Dr Paul Aiken (left), CEO of Mona-Tech Engineerin­g Services Ltd, and engineer Dontae Rodney conducting repairs to ventilator­s and other medical equipment for the public health sector at The University of the West Indies, Mona Faculty of Engineerin­g, on Monday.
 ??  ?? Engineer Dontae Rodney working on a piece of medical equipment as his team repairs ventilator­s and other devices for public health facilities.
Engineer Dontae Rodney working on a piece of medical equipment as his team repairs ventilator­s and other devices for public health facilities.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica