Afghan girls try building ventilator from used car parts

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KABUL, April 15, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – A team of robot-designing girls
in Afghanistan is trying to build a low-cost medical ventilator from
car parts, as health authorities look to boost critical-care
capabilities for coronavirus patients in the impoverished country.

If the teenagers succeed and can get government approval for their
prototype, they say it could be replicated for as little as $300,
where normally ventilators sell for around $30,000.

“The team is working with local health specialists, as well as
experts from Harvard University, to produce the prototype based on a
design by Massachusetts Institute of Technology,” said Roya Mahboob,
who runs an Afghan tech company and sponsors the team of five girls,
aged 14-17.

They are part of a bigger group of high-achieving high school girls
known as the “Afghan Dreamers”, from the western city of Herat, where
coronavirus is on the rise after thousands of people returned from
neighbouring Iran as it experienced a spike in cases.

The girls made headlines in 2017 after being denied visas to take
part in a robotics competition in Washington — before President
Donald Trump intervened and they were allowed to travel.

They are taking engine and battery parts from a Toyota Corolla —
ubiquitious on the streets of Afghanistan — to produce a prototype
they started designing after the Herat governor called for more
ventilators as coronavirus cases rose.

Central to the ventilator is a self-inflating plastic sac known as
an Ambu bag that medical staff use to help patients breathe. The
girls’ prototype uses a mechanical system to operate the bag
automatically and accurately.

“The complicated part is how to adjust the timing and pressure of
pumping, as different patients require different volume and pressure
of air based on their age and the severity of their condition,” Somaya
Farooqi, the team’s 17-year-old captain, told AFP.

With a population of 35 million, Afghanistan only has about 300 ventilators.

Wahidullah Mayar, a spokesman for Afghanistan’s health ministry,
said officials have asked specialists and engineers to help the team.

“We appreciate and encourage these hardworking girls, our sisters,
for their efforts to produce ventilators,” Mayar said.

Any ventilator prototype would have to be approved by the World
Health Organization and the Afghan health ministry before the team
could start producing more devices, Mayar said.

As of Wednesday, Afghan officials had reported at least 784
coronavirus cases and 24 deaths across the country. The true number of
cases is feared to be much higher, as only limited testing kits are
available.