…We can produce 50 machines per week Faisal Sani Bala, an assistant
lecturer at the Department of Mechatronics and Systems Engineering,
Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University (ATBU) Bauchi, is the project lead of
the COVID-19 Innovation Solution at the School of Engineering which
invented an Automatic Ventilator, Automatic Disinfection Chamber,
Software apps for detection of COVID-19, as well as Aerosol boxes. In
this interview, he explains the motive behind the inventions, among
other issues.Daily Trust Saturday: How did this project begin?Faisal
Sani Bala: It started as a dream; I was actually restless for 53 days
and then I thought of how to contribute my quota in fighting COVD-19.
Seeing what other people are doing all over the world, I see no reason
why Nigeria should be an exception. So, I came up with the idea,
conceptualized and made some initial designs. By the time I finished
those initial designs, we were already on strike, so I had to solicit
direct access to the Vice-Chancellor and he granted me audience. I made
presentations to him on the project and he gave me the go-ahead to start
and also seed funds required to purchase materials needed. I mobilized
like minds from immediate past students as well as my academic
colleagues and technologist. As academics, we saw it as a sacrifice,
just the way our colleagues are sacrificing around the world to combat
the pandemic. Right now, our colleagues in places like the United State
of America, United Kingdom and other developed countries are in their
laboratories conducting research on the vaccine or a cure for COVID-19,
as well as equipment required by medical personnel to combat the
pandemic. As ASUU members, we were idle for some weeks because of the
strike, but we felt we are humans first before being lecturers, so we
had to talk with our union.
DT: What was ASUU’s reaction to your demand?Bala:
ASUU was very understanding in this regard and has equally contributed
to the fight against the pandemic after several awareness programmes.
All affected members of the union were able to work without violating
the rules which we swore to protect as members.
DT: How long did it take to fabricate these machines?
Bala: We had just eight days to come up these four solutions and we
worked as a team with discipline and unfettered commitment. The vision
we shared helped in making this work a reality within a short time. As
you can see, our prototype looks like an industrial type.
DT: How long will it take to manufacture a single ventilator or any of the machines?
Bala: If the essential materials are available, we can mobilize the
human resources required and can produce at least 50 ventilators per
week. We see the disinfection spraying machine as a necessity because
infectious diseases like cholera and Lassa fever have maintained their
momentum in the country, especially in ravaging rural dwellers. One of
the major challenges is that people contract these diseases, even in
hospitals when they come to visit or interact with patients. If we have
disinfecting chambers at the entrance of the hospital, people will get
disinfected while entering and coming out, so no disease will find its
way into the hospital ward and those that originated or emanated from
the hospital can be cut off at the chamber before the person leaves the
hospital. Apart from hospitals, it can also be used in other places with
high density of humans and it will help in improving the standard of
hygiene.
DT: What did you intend to achieve with this project?
Bala: There are two or three things; the first is that we are trying to
work the talk, especially to prove that the universities are not fake
or that we don’t have the capability to do what is required of us. What
you are seeing here is a testimony that we can actually do more if given
the opportunity. This exhibition is a plea to the government that our
universities will like to play their role in building this nation.
They’d also like to play their role in the fight against COVD-19 because
all over the world, universities have gotten funding and grants meant
for fighting COVID-19. These funds and grants are to be accessed
immediately to start research on COVID-19. We are, therefore, calling on
government to try and make such grants accessible to the universities.
This innovation is not for commercial purposes, but an intervention to
help fight the pandemic. It wasn’t a paid research, but because our
Vice-Chancellor is committed to innovation, he made resources available
for the necessary materials. The members are not on any wage or salary,
that is the human aspect of it. However, we need the government, private
sector and donor organizations that are willing to fight the COVID-19
to key in.
DT: What is the difference between your ventilator and imported ones?
Bala: Ventilators are of various types. The ventilators we are coming
up with are meant to address emergency and shortage, so the design
method, design methodology and design philosophy is radically different
from the ICU-based ventilators. And it is not just common with Nigeria;
all over the world, the design now is to make ventilators that can be
easily assembled, that can be made from simple components since we don’t
have much time to do the long design circle, certification circle and
other things. Now, the philosophy is to make something that can be used
within the shortest time, but that doesn’t mean it’s done without the
necessary medical experts.
DT: Would you be willing to share this technology with other states ravaged by COVID-19?
Bala: Yes, we are very much willing to take this technology to
Nigerians, like our Aerosol boxes. We are willing to provide them to the
Lagos State government and also willing to share with other states that
have recorded cases and to also extend them to other states where they
have isolation centres.
DT: What were some of the challenges you encountered before this breakthrough?Bala:
Well, some of the challenges are getting the right machine to do
certain functions but we were able to improvise. Power has been a
challenge, although we’re already accustomed to working with or without
light and we have a generator. The Aerosol box is meant to protect
medical personnel. When you look at the ratio of medical personnel to
patients in Nigeria, it is terrifying. We lose our doctors, nurses and
other personnel to infection as a result of coming in contact with
patients. This technology is meant to mitigate such occupational hazard
and I think once hospitals and Isolation centres are equipped with
aerosol boxes, our medical doctors will have minimal exposure to
infections. The Aerosol box is a protective device that gives medical
personnel extra protection when handling patients with COVID-19 and
other respiratory diseases, particularly during incubation which allows
smooth clinical manipulations required for successful incubation. The
Automatic disinfection chamber ensures containment of an outbreak where
disease pathogens get transferred from one person to another. This can
happen in public places and particularly hospitals. Most people don’t
disinfect their cloths when entering or exiting hospital wards. The
disinfection chamber is wired with sensors that detect the presence of a
human being, once there is someone inside the chamber, the disinfectant
is automatically spread on the person from all directions. The
Automatic Ventilator with solar powering and DC backup helps patient
with breathing difficulty or any other respiratory disease. Ventilators
are currently scarce and it is critical for patients who need it.
The
device can run for hours even when there is no electricity. It is easy
and portable for medical use. For the software apps, what you need to do
is start the tablet and snap the picture of the CT-SCAN or if the
CT-SCAN has a digital image available, it can be downloaded via memory
card or USB and transferred to a tablet or computer for the
classification of various illnesses. It is very simple; with just the
press of a button, it will tell you whether it’s pneumonia, COVID-19 or
if the patient is normal.
DT: Have you tested the machines and what was the outcome? Bala:
We have started working with medical doctors. The Chief Medical
Director of the ATBU School Clinic has attempted to use the device and
he has given a good response, but that is not a certification, the issue
of certification is something we will pursue later, but so far, it has
elicited remarkable responses and several other medical doctors who have
seen the innovation are impressed.
DT: How much did the research cost?
Bala: For now, I can’t give you the actual amount, but be assured that
all the machines will be affordable. For the ventilator, we will
continue to work with medical doctors to fine-tune the machine as we are
going to have a pre-clinical trial and clinical trial before the final
delivery. We are not going to skip the protocol required to get it to
work.
DT: What do you need to be able to produce in commercial quantity?
Bala: We will need standard devices from tested and verified OEMs like
electric motors and so on. Rather than importing already made
ventilators, the government should give us financial support and access
to these machines, either those made in this country so that we can use
them for our own production, or have them imported in large quantity so
that we can use them to design our systems.
DT: Who are your team members?Bala:
I, Faisal Sani Bala, am the team leader. We have Engineer Aliyu Sambo,
Engineer Aminu Muhammed Wunti, Mr Moses Adebayo, Miss Jennifer
Kelechukwu, Nasir Nasir, Aliyu Hassan, with support from Engineers Fatai
and Muhammad Shehu Azare from the Technology Incubation Centre.
Source: DailyTrust
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