3D-printed adaptor, used to create prototype emergency personal protective equipment

Made:
2020 in Sussex
3D-printed adaptor for Leucothea full face snorkel mask 3D-printed adaptor for Leucothea full face snorkel mask

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3D-printed adaptor for Leucothea full face snorkel mask
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London

3D-printed adaptor for Leucothea full face snorkel mask
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London

3D-printed adaptor for Leucothea full face snorkel mask, used to create prototype reusable emergency personal protective equipment (PPE) during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe, Sussex, UK, March 2020

This 3D-printed adaptor was used to convert a full-face snorkel mask, intended for recreational use, into a prototype form of reusable emergency personal protective equipment (PPE) during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe. The mask creates a tight seal around the face and was designed to enable the user to inhale via the snorkel element and exhale through a separate channel to prevent the visor from fogging. The adaptor was used to attach to a heat moisture exchanging (HME) filter to the snorkel element, to greatly reduce the risk of airborne transmission of COVID-19 from patients to healthcare practitioners. The idea was that, at the end of each use, the mask and adaptor could be cleaned and the disposable filters changed ready for reuse. The adaptor can also be used to connect the mask to a ventilator.

It was created by a Sussex-based maker group working with a local consultant anaesthetist, who together refined a design created in mainland Europe to make it easier to print and clean. Two variants were created by the team to work with the majority of snorkel masks on the market; this one fits the Leucothea version produced in China. A local appeal shared on social media resulted in a donation of 400 masks from sports stockists and members of the public, which were then cleaned and prepared by volunteers from Brighton College. The new design was tested in a simulated working environment and further validated by researchers from Stanford University.

While PPE needed to be rationed and reused in the UK to ensure supplies did not run out at the initial peak of the crisis, these adapted masks were never used. Similar versions were used to provide emergency protection to staff working in Italian, French, Belgium and Spanish hospitals, and 150 of these units were dispatched to hospitals in Zambia.

Details

Category:
Public Health & Hygiene
Object Number:
2021-627
Materials:
plastic (unidentified)
Measurements:
overall: 51 mm x 55 mm x 25 mm,
type:
tube