Selected article for: "high risk and open source"

Author: Mack, Kelly; Hofmann, Megan; Lakshmi, Udaya; Cao, Jerry; Auradkar, Nayha; Arriaga, Rosa I.; Hudson, Scott E.; Mankoff, Jennifer
Title: Rapid Convergence: The Outcomes of Making PPE during a Healthcare Crisis
  • Cord-id: tf13jtez
  • Document date: 2021_1_19
  • ID: tf13jtez
    Snippet: The NIH 3D Print Exchange is a public and open source repository for primarily 3D printable medical device designs with contributions from expert-amateur makers, engineers from industry and academia, and clinicians. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, a collection was formed to foster submissions of low-cost, local manufacture of personal protective equipment (Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)). We systematically evaluated the 623 submissions in this collection to understand: what makers con
    Document: The NIH 3D Print Exchange is a public and open source repository for primarily 3D printable medical device designs with contributions from expert-amateur makers, engineers from industry and academia, and clinicians. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, a collection was formed to foster submissions of low-cost, local manufacture of personal protective equipment (Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)). We systematically evaluated the 623 submissions in this collection to understand: what makers contributed, how they were made, who made them, and key characteristics of their designs. Our analysis reveals an immediate design convergence to derivatives of a few initial designs affiliated with NIH partners (e.g., universities, the Veteran's Health Administration, America Makes) and major for-profit groups (e.g., Prusa). The NIH worked to review safe and effective designs but was quickly overloaded by derivative works. We found that the vast majority were never reviewed (81.3%) while 10.4% of those reviewed were deemed safe for clinical (5.6%) or community use (4.8%). Our work contributes insights into: the outcomes of distributed, community-based, medical making; features the community accepted as"safe"making; and how platforms can support regulated maker activities in high-risk domains (e.g., healthcare).

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