Tunisia hopes novel methods will aid virus fight
by Caroline Nelly Perrot
The feared impact of coronavirus on Tunisia’s fragile public health system has provoked a flurry of innovation from robotics to digitalisation efforts to bolster the North African country’s pandemic response.
The government has even turned to students for help, asking the engineering school in Sousse, south of the capital Tunis, to task its students with designing a locally made ventilator as their end-of-year project.
Ventilators are crucial for treating critically ill COVID-19 patients, but as in many countries, Tunisia’s poorly equipped hospitals lack sufficient numbers of the devices.
Costs and delivery times for ventilators have increased dramatically.
“Students, teachers and doctors have come up with a functioning prototype,” said Aref Meddeb, the school’s director.
“This is the first time these machines have been made in Tunisia. It shows that there is real potential here.”
Other Tunisian researchers have developed plans for a simplified respirator made with 3-D printed parts.
It will soon be made freely available, allowing undeveloped countries without access to sophisticated equipment to make their own.
“We are using everything that we can find open source and the help of a Tunisian engineer specialised in respirators,” said Khalil Allouch, an engineering student on the local respirator project based in Tunis.
“This crisis has shown us we can be more self-sufficient.” (AFP)