Catering oven tray and used specimen transport bags for COVID-19

PART OF:
Collection of artwork, signage and consumable products used at the Cambridge COVID-19 Test Centre
Made:
2015-2020 in Norway and unknown place

Single metal catering oven tray set up with full quota of 18 used DGP Pathopouch® 95, specimen transport bag, with sample removed but still containing QR coded wireless temperature sensors and handwritten numbers, showing the first process of autoclaving that samples went through at Cambridge COVID-19 Test Centre, based at the Anne McLaren Building on the University of Cambridge Biomedical Campus, April 2020 - April 2021

COVID-19 sample testing includes several steps. Each sample was heat treated using industrial catering ovens, pioneered by the Cambridge team. This makes the sample safer for laboratory workers to handle and means they can be handled outside of biosafety cabinets or in high level facilities. Every vial was assessed to make sure it is safe and suitable for analysis. This includes adding QR codes to track the sample through the system and barcodes.

Delivered in just five weeks rather than the normal six month fit out for a testing laboratory the Cambridge COVID-19 Test Centre tested 3 million samples. The Test Centre was originally a collaboration between the University of Cambridge, AstraZeneca, and GSK, staffed by volunteers from the three sites, many of leaving their studies or roles for a few months, or taking on additional jobs. Staff worked in shift patterns in the same role to prevent the spread of COVID-19. In June 2020, the testing centre transition to a directly employed workforce, rather than relying on volunteers. The laboratory was run by Charles River Laboratories with 200 staff.

Details

Category:
Public Health & Hygiene
Object Number:
2022-72/142
Materials:
plastic and metal
Measurements:
tray: 120 mm x 529 mm x 324 mm,
bag: 243 mm x 175 mm
type:
laboratory equipment