The Herald (South Africa)

Young engineers develop bag mask ventilator

● Bay team to fast-track production, help save lives

- Herald Reporter

Seeing the need for devices to assist people suffering from Covid19 and other diseases, a multidisci­plinary team of innovative young engineers based at the Propella Business Incubator in Port Elizabeth have dropped all their other projects to develop a low-cost bag mask ventilator.

The device fills the urgent need for a low-cost non-invasive ventilator for less serious cases, and frees the expensive units used in intensive care units for those in need of advanced care.

“I was impressed by the simplicity, yet effectiven­ess of the design,” Port Elizabeth anaestheti­st specialist Dr Hennie Smit said.

“It is meant to assist respiratio­n and not full ventilatio­n, and therefore only needs a tight-fitting face mask, and is suitable for use in general wards where it can be monitored by non-specialist nurses,” he said, after evaluating the working prototype.

Propella incubator members and Nelson Mandela University engineerin­g students Zain Imran and Neo Mabunda teamed up with Zain’s brother, Zaahid, and Kelvin Langwani to develop a working prototype within five days.

“In anticipati­on of the lockdown, we moved our 3D printer and other necessary equipment and components such as motor and microcontr­oller from Propella to Zain’s home,” Mabunda said.

The team, which has complement­ary engineerin­g skills, is now back at the Propella Business Incubator, with special permission.

At the heart of the unit is an inexpensiv­e plastic pouch called a bag-valve resuscitat­or, or Ambu bag, which most hospitals already keep -— and, crucially, according to Zain, already has the necessary medical certificat­ion.

“We set the standards based on WHO [World Health Organisati­on] requiremen­ts for ventilator­s and ticked all the boxes, such as the volume of air delivered to the lungs, the breaths per minute, inspiratio­n/expiration ratio and control/fail-safe capabiliti­es,” Imran said.

“The result is a pre-intensive care ventilator that ticks many of the requiremen­ts of a highend ventilator.”

The Salutaris (Latin for lifesaving) device is powered by a servo motor that expands and contracts two arms.

Rapid prototypin­g was possible thanks to the 3D printer.

It can be powered by mains or a car battery and durability testing is under way.

The Propella team is also linked to the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology in the US, which is working on a similar concept.

“A number of teams around the world have announced ventilator­s which appear to be functional, but where the Salutaris differs is that it is a highly engineered solution designed from the outset for manufactur­e with full production and cost optimisati­on in mind,” Engeli Enterprise Developmen­t operations director Wayne Oosthuizen said.

Engeli, which founded the Propella incubator together with NMU, is assisting with fundraisin­g and commercial­isation of the bag ventilator to ensure it is made available to hospitals and clinics as soon as possible.

“We are aiming to start production as soon as the tooling for the injection moulded parts is complete.

“All that is holding us back is the finalisati­on of the funding needed for the tooling and initial investment in components,” Oosthuizen said.

Another Propella member, Clifford Hamilton, is working on the moulds and helping with the design to make it as efficient as possible for manufactur­ing.

Final pricing is not yet available as some components will have to be imported, “but we are setting our pricing benchmark at R5,000 or less.

“This [is about] getting an operationa­l and cost-effective ventilator into hospitals,” Oosthuizen said.

A production facility is being designed with the help of Grant Minnie of Propella, who is an industrial engineer.

“We have the factory space and are sourcing certified reusable face masks, which will both bring down the operating costs of the machines and speed up delivery.

“The plan is to produce up to 20,000 units a month, if the market demands this,” he said.

Propella manager Anita Palmer said: “This fast-track rollout from concept to production shows the power of the Propella ecosystem which we have crafted over the years.”

 ??  ?? LIFE-SAVING DEVICE: Bay engineers Neo Mabunda and Zain Imran are developing a low-cost bag mask ventilator
LIFE-SAVING DEVICE: Bay engineers Neo Mabunda and Zain Imran are developing a low-cost bag mask ventilator

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