MEDICAL EQUIPMENT & DEVICES FEATURE
STRATASYS COALITION FOR FACE SHIELD PRODUCTION WITH 3D PRINTING NOW NUMBERS OVER 150 ORGANIZATIONS RESPONDING TO PANDEMIC
A
coalition of companies and universities assembled by Stratasys
(NASDAQ: SSYS) to produce face shields leveraging 3D printers now numbers more than 150, the company said. Among others, the list includes Boeing, Toyota Motor Company, Medtronic, Dunwoody College of Technology, the University of Central Florida, and the University of Minnesota. In an effort to confront the COVID-19
pandemic, Stratasys set an initial goal to produce 5,000 face shields at no cost to recipients through its own and partner resources by March. 27. This included both a 3D printed visor and a clear plastic shield that covers the entire face. Stratasys said that number had been exceeded by the target date and the coalition produced more than 11,000 face shields next week, and 16,000 during the following week. Any 3D printing shop that wishes to
help print at least 100 visors can fill out an online form to be invited to join the effort. In Europe, the company is serving as a hub to connect service bureaus with those requesting help, and has fielded offers and requests in most of the larger countries. The company has also posted the full face shield printing and assembly instructions for anyone to produce face shields on their own. For the U.S., Stratasys is using its GrabCAD Shop work order management software to assign orders from healthcare systems to each coalition member. So far, the coalition is serving the needs
of more than 30 different health systems, covering hospitals, clinics, academic medical centers, and nursing homes. The first shipments started on Wednesday, Mar. 25. Stratasys has received requests for 350,000 face shields, so further acceleration in production across coalition members is critical. “I have never seen collaboration
across our industry the way I’ve been seeing it over the last couple weeks,” said Stratasys healthcare segment leader, Scott Drikakis. “The need is dire, but we are getting the kind of commitments from our coalition partners that will make a real difference and help buy time to scale up the manufacturing of shields and other essential supplies. This rapid, adaptive response is what 3D printing does exceptionally well, and I’m very proud of our employees and partners.” Stratasys is producing thousands of
visors itself in Minnesota, California, and Texas, marshalling the resources of
3D printed frames being produced on mass by the coalition
Stratasys has received requests for over 350,000 3D printed face shields and working with the coalition to ramp up production
Stratasys, Stratasys Direct Manufacturing, and MakerBot. This is in addition to continuing to meet other requests of customers and partners for 3D printers, materials, on-demand parts, and service. “Stay at home” orders are not currently limiting its ability to meet these needs other than limited access to on-site support. The company is also responding to the
crisis in additional ways. Stratasys is ramping up production of 3D printing materials to support its extensive partner network. It also has made free the material licenses on many of its high- end printers used to make the visors during this time. An initiative led by anesthesiology residents of Massachusetts General
Hospital called the CoVent-19 Challenge will launch next week. The challenge will ask engineers and designers to help develop a new rapidly deployable ventilator and other innovative solutions to the ventilator shortage, and Stratasys will support the challenge and promote it via its GrabCAD community of more than seven million professional designers, engineers, manufacturers and students. The company will also provide prototyping services to the challenge finalists.
For more information on how Stratasys is responding to the COVID- 19 pandemic and how others can help, visit
www.stratasys.com/covid-19.
IRISH MANUFACTURING | APRIL 2020 21
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