Summary
- The beauty of 3D printing, David says, is the ability to manufacture customised items for hospitals faster while achieving enhanced quality and production volumes.
- To a great extent, compared to imported equipment that are expensive and take months to reach the country, the innovation helps keep hospitals processes running once parts of crucial medical equipment wear out and need urgent replacement.
The purring of machines ushers us into a well-designed lab, one
of many office spaces inside the sleepy LakeHub tech incubation centre
in Kisumu’s leafy suburb of Milimani.
Some 18 units of
three-dimensional printers have been beautifully placed on shelves, with
each humming to the rhythm of additive manufacturing, all coming from a
command from a laptop resting on a table.
At one
corner of the room are dozens of face shields, tens of packs of ear
savers and contactless door handles while on another one, various
medical equipment parts are well arranged on a table.
Daisy
Achieng, who has just come from a delivery errand Jaramogi Oginga
Odinga Teaching and Referral Hospital (JOOTRH), tells us she has
delivered more than 3,000 3D printed medical units in the past week
alone.
“Hospitals and health centres in this region place orders every day. Our job is to manufacture and supply,” she says.
David
Oginga, the firm engineer, reveals that in the past five months the
startup — Kijenzi 3D — has churned out more than 10,000 face shields and
5,000 ear relievers in the ongoing war on Covid-19.
“Using
our 16 Prusa 3D machines and two Mechboards we print a variety of
personal protective equipment (PPE) of any design as well as spare parts
for medical equipment, models for body organs and equipment for
occupational therapy,” the 27-year-old biomedical engineer expounds.
He adds that Kijenzi 3D also uses the technology to produce
parts for dialysis machines, microscope knobs, clutches, incubator
latches and finger clamps, but on demand.
The beauty of
3D printing, David says, is the ability to manufacture customised items
for hospitals faster while achieving enhanced quality and production
volumes.
To a great extent, compared to imported
equipment that are expensive and take months to reach the country, the
innovation helps keep hospitals processes running once parts of crucial
medical equipment wear out and need urgent replacement.
“We
have also been supplying these products to Aga Khan Hospital, St Jairus
Hospital, Kisumu Specialist Hospital, Siaya County Referral Hospital,
Star Hospital, Kisumu County Hospital, Kenya Medical Research Institute
and Acacia Medical Centre,” says Ms Achieng.
While most
prototypes for 3D printing have been placed online for free downloads
to help innovators around the world to print solutions for Covid-19,
most of them, according to Elvis Ogweno, the production engineer, are
just general designs for medical items that are common.
“What
we find online is actually not what doctors ask us for. They request
for specific parts or items that have unique features and those need to
be designed from scratch,” he explains and adds that he does that using
the Fusion 360 3D software.
It takes one machine 20
minutes to print a face shield, and prints at least 150 pieces each day.
For the 16 machines working concurrently, they meet the production
capacity of 2,400 units with each going for Sh250.
The
World Health Organisation recommends the wearing of face shields on top
of face masks for people who work for long hours in high concentration
jobs like surgeons, nurses, dentists, lab technicians or construction
workers, to keep off droplets or liquid splashes from the face.
For
ear relievers, each 3D printer produces six pieces every 35 minutes,
which they sell at Sh45 each. Also called ear savers, they are placed at
the mask straps on the ear to relieve the strain caused on the ear by
long use of face masks.
In Katoloni, 2.6 kilometres
from Machakos town, we found Nehemiah Mutie busy packaging ear savers
and face shields as two of his four 3D printers’ nozzles moved left and
right, printing more savers.
The other two machines, he
said, were awaiting clients who want to print their equipment and parts
from their homes, and he was putting a casing on them.
Mr
Mutie, who graduated from the University of Nairobi last year with a
bachelors in mechanical engineering, joined the 3D printing industry
back in 2016 and has since grown his experience to the level of
manufacturing the printers himself.
“I aim to give
people the freedom to make what they want from their homes at a very
affordable price. In the past four years, I have sold over 100 machines
each at Sh46,000. All I need to make one is a motor, Liquid Crystal
Display (LCD) screen for commands and the filaments for printing. From
my engineering classes, I can handle the rest with ease,” says the
26-year-old innovator.
To print any object, design or
prototype is first created on a computer and the file saved on a memory
card. The card is then inserted into a slot in the 3D printer after
which the machine is commanded from a small LCD screen to print the
file.
The
material used for the printing is called a filament and is made of soft
plastic, which is melted into a fine liquid through heat produced by
the machine.
Continuous addition of tiny drops of this
liquid on a board to ultimately create the desired object is what makes
experts call 3D printing additive manufacturing. For huge objects, they
are first allowed to cool off before removing them.
During
the visit to Mr Mutie’s workshop, we found a consignment ready for
shipping to Germany for consumers who want to sample products made in
Africa.
“I have also supplied face shields to Greece
but locally I have delivered to the Ministry of Health and Nairobi
Hospital,” says Mr Mutie, who is also the managing director of AB3D, one
of the pioneer 3D printing startups in Kenya along with Kuunda 3D,
which is also using the technology to help the country meet the demand
for PPEs.
He tells us that he trains school children on
how to use the technology because “future populations will need this
technology to boost their export capacity”.
On
Nairobi’s 95 Limuru Road, we enter into Mehul Shah’s offices and find
him working on a prototype on his large screen. Gleefully welcoming us
into his space, he mentions to us the various trials he has done to test
the prowess of the technology.
Before resting on
printing face shields and ear savers back in March, he used to print
industrial objects including the tails of aeroplanes. His printers were
the biggest this writer saw in all four counties visited.
“When
Covid-19 landed in Kenya, I decided to take it as my responsibility to
help the government produce face shields and ear relievers as a lower
cost,” he tells us.
But at one point, in his ambition
to print Y-splitters for air ventilators, he was stopped by medics in
the Ministry of Health who warned him about the dangers of going ahead
with the project.
“I had thought it was a nice idea to
for a two or four splitter to allow one ventilator to be used by two or
four patients but doctors advised that every air ventilator is meant for
one patient and splitting the oxygen puts the lives of patients at
great risk,” narrates Mr Mehul, who is the chief executive of Ultra Red
Technologies, a startup he founded in 2014.
But since
that day, he has produced more than 7,000 face shields and hundreds of
ear savers using his four powerful 3D printers that make 50 ear
relievers each in under one and a half hours. Every shield is printed
within six minutes.
He sells directly to distributors,
who supply to hospitals and health centres in Nairobi, rural areas and
even crosses borders to Somalia, Ethiopia and South Sudan.
In Eldoret town, just past the Moi Teaching and
Referral Hospital, you find St Lukes Orthopaedic and Trauma Hospital.
Here, 3D printing is under critical utilisation in making prosthetic
arms that are fitted to victims of violence who lost their hands or
those born without them.
The initiative, which is being
carried out in conjunction with Victoria Hand Project, a Canadian
organisation, aims to help amputees regain function to improve their
quality of life.
In a pandemic period where many
families in developing countries are committing their economic resources
to food leaving little savings for healthcare, the hospital, through
the technology now charges only Sh20,000 for the entire procedure while
normal rate remains at Sh200,000 in other hospitals.
Dr
Kibor Lelei, chief executive and a senior orthopaedic surgeon at the
hospital, says an arm printed using the technology can be used for
holding, grasping, cooking and lifting a weight of up to two kilos.
“I
love this technology because it takes a shorter period to make a
prosthetic limb and you can make the exact size needed by the amputee.
You can also customise it, for instance, by taking a photo of your foot
and get it created,” he says.
But Annah Koinei, the
lead technician at the 3D printing department at the hospital who
handles two super-machines explains that the process of making an
artificial arm involves six steps, which takes only five days compared
to the normal process that takes two weeks.
“The first
step is screening the patients to determine whether they are below elbow
or knee amputation. After that, measurements are taken for a cast,” she
says.
A photometry procedure that involves taking
between 60 and 80 photos follows, and this, she points out, is meant to
guide in finding the correct 3D angles.
“Using our
Agisoft software, these photos are then aligned on the computer. The
Meshmixer software is used to create a socket while the Curer software
now interprets that for use by the 3D printer,” she expounds.
The
fifth step in the actual 3D printing and time taken depends on the size
of the socket created. Fingers and palms have standard sizes for
children and adults. Ms Koinei says this process takes between 18 and 40
hours.
“The fingers, palm, wrist and thump are printed
separately with each taking eight hours, nine hours, four hours and one
hour respectively. That makes assembling all into one arm the last
step,” she notes and discloses that since February, she has printed and
fitted nine amputees, with seven scheduled for the process.
Wesley
Korir, an orthopaedic technologist and expert in both below-knee and
above-knee prosthesis as well as above elbow procedures says once an
amputee is fitted the artificial arm, they can use is through body
movement via a string that runs through the middle of the casing and
connected to the flesh.
“The prosthetic arm is
connected to the flesh or the humerus bone using the string and thus the
micro electric movements enables the amputee to an extent, flex or
twist the arm. But other movements are body-powered,” he clarifies.
However,
this technology comes with its own set of hurdles, which holds back its
wide adoption as Kenya gears up for the technological disruption in the
medical arena.
The cost of filaments, according to Mr
Mutie, is one drawback that innovators face, as they still have to be
imported to support the industry.
Having discovered the
same, Mr Mehul has gone into an experimentation spree, testing various
designs to print the filaments in Nairobi, thereby reducing their cost.
“This
would, in turn, lower the cost of products we produce every day. We no
longer have to wait for them to be shipped from abroad because that can
delay work and even contribute to the death of patients as doctors bet
on us to print crucial medical equipment parts,” he says.
For
Ms Koinei, apart from the required checks and maintenance, the fact
that most of the small parts printed end up with unwanted plastic that
cannot be recycled is a hindrance to cost efficiency.
But
even as the 3D printing industry in Kenya undergoes teething problems,
the biggest stumbling block to the future of manufacturing, according to
the innovators, is the Kenya Bureau of Standards, which they accuse of
taking too long to approve products that are in high demand.
“This
industry needs care from the government. We expect their officers to
inspect our products and technology and give us approvals in a shorter
period. Not the three months that we are used to,” says Mr Mutie.
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