By Daniel Li
Dr. Aditi Sharma, a UC San
Diego bioengineering alumna and resident physician at the UC Irvine dermatology
department, is combining her engineering skills and medical expertise to solve
one of the ongoing challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic: a shortage of
protective masks for healthcare workers.
Sharma and several
colleagues developed a method to fabricate face masks out of discarded surgical
tool sterilization wraps, and launched a project that aims to create 10,000 of
these masks for healthcare workers. Their project was featured in the Los
Angeles Times.
Their mask is made from
recycled Halyard H600, a material used for surgical equipment sterilization,
with straps made of recycled Gemini surgical wrap material.
Their repurposed
sterilization wrap mask has up to 86.5 percent filtration rate; this is lower
than the 95 percent of N95 masks, but more than three times more effective than
ordinary cloth masks, which many health care workers have been forced to use
due to insufficient personal protective quipment (PPE). Their goal is to be able to reserve N95 masks for
medical personnel working directly with known COVID-19 patients.
In just two months, Sharma
and her team have made over 2,000 face masks, and are looking to expand the
project to the entire state of California and hopefully the rest of the
country.
“We're hoping that
ultimately not only will healthcare providers have the masks, but maybe even
people in the community can have access to them as well,” Sharma said. “In
terms of getting towards that 10,000 goal, I think probably in the next couple
of weeks we should be there, between manufacturers in the local community who
are willing to help us and volunteer groups who are willing to help.”
Sharma graduated from UC San
Diego in 2009 with a degree in biomedical engineering, and then received her
medical degree at the Medical College of Virginia. During her time at UC San
Diego, Sharma had the opportunity to work at Pfizer as a research assistant and
participate in the Amgen Scholars Program over the summer. These two
experiences sparked her curiosity in immunology and inspired her to conduct
research on biological warfare and bioterrorism under Dr. Anthony Fauci at the
National Institutes of Health.
Sharma's masks, made from repurposed sterilization wrap. |
After a one-year stint at
the NIH, Sharma shifted gears and worked as an engineer at the World Health
Organization to improve access to medical devices for low income individuals.
She explained that her background in engineering has given her a unique
approach to medicine.
“I think something that is
kind of fundamental to engineering is asking, “Is this the most efficient
process and how can we improve it?” Sharma said. “I think sometimes in
medicine, we accept what is told to us-- that this is how it is. And I find
that that engineering side of me is constantly saying, ‘What can we do
better?’”
When Sharma came back into
the medical field, her main goal was to find a way to integrate the fields of
public health, engineering, and medicine in her work; this project has allowed
her to do so and help contribute to the fight against COVID-19. Sharma
encourages students to take advantage of all the resources that UC San Diego
offers and to dream big.
“What I loved about UC San
Diego is there are so many resources,” Sharma said. “I used to go to the
Teaching and Learning Commons...and I remember really learning linear algebra
very well because I had that extra support system. I am also grateful for
applying for those job opportunities that I never thought I would get. I think
it set me up for the rest of my career.”
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