Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Meet humanity’s new ally in the coronaviru­s fight: robots

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

They disinfect hospital corridors with ultraviole­t light to eliminate traces of the novel coronaviru­s. They help nurses manage routine tasks so they can spend more time with sick patients. They deliver meals to people heeding public health orders to stay at home and help police deliver warnings to those who aren’t.

As medical researcher­s rush to develop treatments and vaccines to deploy against the coronaviru­s, scientists and engineers are working on another type of weapon that could play an instrument­al role in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic: robots.

“As epidemics escalate, the potential roles of robotics are becoming increasing­ly clear,” an internatio­nal group of researcher­s wrote last month in the journal Science Robotics.

And there’s much more robots could do if engineers concentrat­ed their efforts on the greatest needs, researcher­s said.

“At this time, we really need to ensure that we have a global orchestrat­ed sustainabl­e approach to (robotics) research,” said Guang-zhong Yang, dean of the Institute of Medical Robotics at Shanghai Jiao Tong University.

Here’s a closer look at how robots could play a larger role in the pandemic.

–Robots on the front lines A big concern in any infectious disease outbreak is minimizing risk to the doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers who are in direct contact with sick patients. If those caregivers also become ill, it means less treatment for patients.

“When health workers are at risk, we are all at risk,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, director-general of the World Health Organizati­on.

Robots could take their place in certain circumstan­ces, such as administer­ing tests to see whether people have been infected with the coronaviru­s, Yang said. That’s crucial because people who seem to be perfectly healthy may in fact be infected and could spread the disease to others.

“Silent infection is the biggest problem,” Yang said.

It helps that robots don’t get sick, and – unless they run out of power – they don’t need to sleep.

Russell Taylor, a roboticist at Johns Hopkins University whose work led to the developmen­t of Da Vinci surgical robots, said medical robots could be useful in intensive care units where risk of contaminat­ion was a major worry.

For example, a health worker needing to tend to an Ebola patient might need to put on heavy personal protective equipment before entering a high-risk area, then remove and discard that equipment during the decontamin­ation process at the end of their shift. That’s time-consuming, tiring and potentiall­y dangerous.

Sending a remotely operated robot to interact with the patient instead could dramatical­ly reduce that risk, Taylor said. After all, robots are immune to biological pathogens and can be efficientl­y disinfecte­d with harsh chemicals. Not so for human beings.

–Robots behind the scenes But doctors and health work

ers don’t necessaril­y want to stop having contact with their patients, even with the risks involved, said Bill Smart, a roboticist at Oregon State University.

“The human contact part (of the job) is really important,” he said.

Robotics is still a developing field, and patient care is complex. If robots remain in supporting rather than starring roles, Smart explained, “you’re not directly interactin­g with the patients where it could go really wrong if the robot breaks, and you’re also not denying the patient human contact.”

That said, robots could still help minimize the risk for these front-line medical staffers by taking on more menial tasks in order to reduce the time a nurse or doctor has to spend in a dangerous environmen­t.

That could mean using drones to transport medicine to and within hospitals, or using robots to deliver meals. Roundthe-clock disinfecti­on by wandering robots – something akin to a Roomba on steroids – could also minimize contaminat­ion risk.

–Robots in the past During the Ebola outbreak that began in 2014, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and the National Science Foundation organized workshops to identify ways in which robots could make a difference.

But once the epidemic came under control, interest in (and funding for) the project dried up.

“As a species we tend to be a bit ADD,” said Robin Murphy, a roboticist at Texas A&M University.

This feast-or-famine approach to funding means scientists, engineers and medical emergency personnel aren’t likely to have robotic tools ready for when the next pandemic hits, scientists said.

 ?? Zuma Press/tns ?? A robot is on service at Xiaotangsh­an Hospital in Beijing, China, on March 30.
Zuma Press/tns A robot is on service at Xiaotangsh­an Hospital in Beijing, China, on March 30.
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