Monthly Archives: April 2020

Bengaluru redux: books about our past

Three books help you rediscover the city’s fascinating past

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Nothing makes you nostalgic about a city like being told that you can’t go there. The irony of the current raging pandemic is that inhabitants are shut out from a city that they are living in. So, Metrolife scrambled through its library to send you on a nostalgia trip. We found three pieces of writing that illuminate Bengaluru from a time far gone. All the pieces refer to the city come from the time when the city was still officially called ‘Bangalore’ and not ‘Bengaluru’.

Bangalore: the explorer’s sourcebook

One book that we found is Sourcebook Publishing Company’s ‘Bangalore: the explorer’s sourcebook’. Published in 1995, the book, which is a guide for the uninitiated tourist, has been cornily subtitled ‘Breathtaking Bangalore’ and ‘The Heart of South India’.

For a tourist book, the book catches you off guard by getting too personal at times. You can feel the lump in the throat when the publisher says, “Used to writing long notes, this once, I am short of words”.

Being a relic, we are separated from the milieu of this book by 25 years, and the fonts and advertisements are not ones you have seen in decades. As a book that lists out suggestions for people, it may be vastly outdated, but that is what makes it such a great document to understand what the city used to be.

Readers today may feel alienated by instructions about catching an auto, such as “The minimum charge is Rs 4.60 and the drivers have charge charts which give the corresponding charges to those on the meter”. Another shock: “One can also hire an auto for a whole day for approximately Rs 120”.

Being a book for the outsider, ‘The explorer’s sourcebook’ celebrates the city’s impressive multiculturalism.

It is pleasing to hear the book talk about different languages and ethnicities living together in harmony. While it is always simplistic to think of any era as a utopia, it is still a sparkling vision.

Bangalored: the expat story

If the explorer’s sourcebook was our window into the 90s, ‘Bangalored: the expat story’ is a window to the decade that came after. But what sets Eshwar Sundaresan’s book apart from the tourist guide, among other things, is the excellent prose and sense of humour.

For instance, the writer, in the acknowledgments page, thanks BESCOM “for their delightful inefficiency. Had it not been for their erratic power supply, I would have met all my deadlines and life would have been a drab.”

Published in 2006, the book is an attempt to unpack the newly minted term ‘Bangalored’. It had gained prominence during the 2004 US presidential election and came with a lot of anger because it denoted that people in the US were losing jobs as they were outsourced to Bengaluru.

Sundaresan’s intention is to take the word, borne out of hate and fear, and make it “rounder”. So, he interviews the expatriates themselves. “In other words,” he says, “I believe the expatriates can teach Indians something about India.”

Despite the heaviness of the subject, the writer is very indulgent about the city. His introduction, for instance, starts, “A light fog envelops the calm of the November morning. Inside the Indiranagar park, joggers and walkers of all ages are  beginning their workouts. A couple of college students are holding hands in silence as they occupy seats in the farthest corner of the park. Suddenly, a volley of shrieking laughter pierces the heart of the fog and startles the mynahs into flight. The laughter therapy group, too, has begun its workouts.”

The book says that as of 2006, 12,000 foreigners, that is more than half the expatriate population in the country, live in Bengaluru. The book sought to examine the levels at which they interact with the locals and the impact that they have on the cultural, financial, social, political and educational spheres.

“Most of the expatriates featured in the book are resourceful, some are quirky and eccentric, and a few are stubbornly idealistic, but they are all memorable. What emerges is a whole new perspective on urban India and its ambiguities,” the book’s  blurb reads.

So, for Sundaresan, Bengaluru is about the meeting of the old and the new. A man driving an army truck, to him, is emblematic of Bengaluru’s cantonment past.

A 20-something IT professional tying the knot of his tie while waiting for his company bus, is emblematic of the city’s present. When they look at each other, representing two different eras, yet brought together in time, it is a waltz of history.

But reading the book fourteen years later, we see a very different Bangalore. The vision of a city covered in chrome in long gone. There are no longer pizza parlours whose advertisement taglines read “gigabytes of taste”. In 2020, in the era of Donald Trump and his ‘America First’ policy, all this may be retro or even kitsch.

But reading certain parts of the book, we realise that some things about the city will never change. In the introduction, Sundaresan writes, “Turning into Old Madras Road, I find the traffic gliding along as if on autopilot. In an hour’s time, this stretch would mutate beyond recognition. People will be conversing in the language of honks and expletives”.

‘Mysore and Ramrajya’

While writings on the city are not scarce, there is one that is hardly mentioned. Written by M K Gandhi, the article, originally written as a speech, has been titled ‘Mysore and Ramrajya’ and published in a NIAS compilation. He was recovering from an illness in 1927 and had stayed near Bangalore and near Nandi Hills. He used to hold prayer meetings under a peepal tree at this time.

In the piece, Gandhi spoke about the then Mysore state, expressed appreciation for the work of Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV and outlined what had to be done to make princely Mysore “Ramarajya”. The editors of the book in which this speech was included say  Mahatma’s vision did not survive, “but it is worth remembering that, if nothing else, it tells us that there was a time when Bangalore was not always preoccupied with modernism”.

Gandhi had delivered the speech in English, but he didn’t seem too happy about it. He says that he wished all his listeners in Mysore understood Hindi, but adds “I do not know when that time is going to come”. While praising M Visvesvaraya’s works such as Krishna Raja Sagar Dam and Bhadravati Iron Works, he makes an appeal to the state of Mysore to use the charkha so that the economic situation of the peasantry will go up.

He urges Mysoreans to give up drink and beef, and deplores many Sanskrit scholars in the state who refuse to teach the language to ‘Adi Karnataka’, that is the lower caste people of the state.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Metrolife> Metrolife on the move / by Roshan H Nair, Bengaluru / March 22nd, 2020

Yakshagana artiste Krishna Yaji Indagunji passes away

Senior Yakshagana artiste and legendary chande percussionist Krishna Yaji Indagunji passed away at his home in Honnavar in Uttara Kannada district on Friday evening. He was 72. He is survived by his wife and three daughters. The last rites will be performed on Saturday.

Krishna Yaji Indagunji had served for long in noted, and more than eight decade-old Idagunji Mahaganapathi Yakshagana Mandali being led by Keremane family and Gundabala Yakshagana Mela.

Krishna Yaji Indagunji, an artiste of Badaguthittu school of Yakshagana, was the recipient of erstwhile Karnataka Yakshagana and Janapada Academy award, Udupi Yakshagana Kalaranga Award and many other awards.

In his condolence message senior Yakshagana artiste of Keremane family, who is now leading the Idagunji mela, Keremane Shivananda Hegde said, “His life, passion for art and his achievements will inspire generations to come. He has left our troupe and our family in deep sorrow and vacuum.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Mangaluru / by Special Correspondent / Mangaluru – April 25th, 2020

When the 1918 Spanish flu reached Bengaluru

The Spanish Flu's name comes from the fact that even as wartime censorship in the United States and most of Europe suppressed news of the influenza, the media in neutral Spain reported on it extensively. Photo: Wiki Commons
The Spanish Flu’s name comes from the fact that even as wartime censorship in the United States and most of Europe suppressed news of the influenza, the media in neutral Spain reported on it extensively. Photo: Wiki Commons

June 1918. A debilitating disease suddenly swept through Mumbai. Thousands fell ill, complaining of debilitating fever and cough, sometimes with intestinal problems.

For hundreds of unfortunates, their lungs filled with fluids and they died as their body was starved of oxygen. This was the Spanish influenza pandemic of 1918-19, which killed an astounding 50 million worldwide. Recent estimates put the death toll in India at a staggering 12 million.

Scientists refer to Spanish influenza as the ‘mother of all influenza pandemics’, since it is the common ancestor of human and swine flu viruses. The disease is inextricably associated with World War I.

The name comes from the fact that even as wartime censorship in the United States and most of Europe suppressed news of the influenza, the media in neutral Spain reported on it extensively, including when their king Alfonso XIII fell ill with it.

Spanish influenza’s first wave reached Mumbai when soldiers returned from Europe, carrying the virus with them. An even more lethal second wave hit in September.

When the pandemic reached Mysore State, it hit it hard. The State had still not shaken off the plague. Wartime shortages had pushed up the prices of food and other essentials. To make matters worse, the monsoon failed that year.

The disease first passed through Bengaluru in late June without causing much harm. The second wave in mid-September was deadlier. Suddenly, entire families fell ill.

Higher fatality

Dispensaries, clinics and hospitals were overcrowded. Doctors, nurses and compounders were completely overwhelmed. Corpses piled up. Unlike COVID-19, Spanish influenza had a far higher fatality among the young and able-bodied than the old.

Offices emptied as people across all professions and classes fell ill, among others, the health officer in Bengaluru and the then Chief Secretary of Mysore State.

In early October, Bengaluru’s City Municipal Council, under the leadership of the President KP Puttanna Chetty, took several quick, creative and effective steps to deal with the health crisis. Temporary dispensaries were opened, some housed in municipal schools that were closed at the time.

Mobile dispensaries were set up to ensure medicines reached everyone. All dispensaries were directed to stay open for longer hours and to stock enough of the medicines required, including thymol, which was prescribed a preventative.

Since hospitals were filled beyond their capacity, temporary tents and sheds were set up to accommodate the sick. Retired medical staff and medical students were brought in to help with the workload. Health officers went around neighbourhoods to see if there were any infected people and to persuade them to move to the hospitals or the camps to prevent the disease from spreading.

Leaflets in Kannada and English were distributed, which explained the symptoms of influenza, how it spread, and how it was important to ‘separate the sick from the healthy,’ and to avoid ‘the entire family congregating in the sick room.’

People were advised to ‘tie a clean handkerchief on which a teaspoon of eucalyptus oil is sprinkled, across the nose and mouth’ when entering the sick room, to provide a certain extent of protection. They were also strongly urged to avoid crowded places.

A striking feature of the response to the influenza pandemic was the voluntary effort in providing relief. Much like today, when several people are working, often with the police and the BBMP, to ensure the poor are not forgotten during the lockdown, in 1918 too, volunteers helped ensure relief supplies reached the poor and families where there was no one left to tend to the sick.

In Bengaluru, the relief operation was coordinated by Chief Officer R Subba Rao. He divided the city into several blocks with a relief party in charge of each. Supplies included medicines, milk and kanji, a lot of which was prepared at a government facility and then distributed by car, carts and even lorries.

Municipal councillors and volunteers who worked ceaselessly included Father Briand, Ramachandra Rao Scindia, Rev D A Rees, B Usman Khan, B Chinnaswami Setty, Ghulam Dastangir, B K Garudachar, R Gopalaswami Iyer and many, many others.

Assisting them were the Social Service League, Young Men’s Christian Association, students of the Wesleyan, London Mission and National High Schools, and many others. Puttanna Chetty toured the city himself to assist the relief works and ensure they went on smoothly.

By the end of November, the disease was finally under control. More than 1,95,000 people died in Mysore State, 40,000 in Bengaluru alone. With the compounding problems of agrarian distress, rural areas were affected much worse.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Spectrum> Spectrum Top Stories / by Meera Iyer / April 08th, 2020

Spreading smiles with food, funds

Two aspirational city-based businessmen have decided to help migrant workers and the urban poor with freshly cooked food, dry ration and preventive body gear like masks, PPEs and gloves

Nikhil Kamath (left) and Nikhil Hegde
Nikhil Kamath (left) and Nikhil Hegde

Bengaluru :

Two aspirational city-based businessmen have decided to help migrant workers and the urban poor with freshly cooked food, dry ration and preventive body gear like masks, PPEs and gloves. The two Nikhils – Nikhil Kamath (33), the co-founder and chief information officer of Zerodha – a city-based financial service company and Nikhil Hegde (36), owner of ‘Smally’s Café’ – a popular chain of restaurants – have been distributing 15,000 food packets daily to migrant workers and slum dwellers in Bengaluru.

Nikhil Kamath distributing free food
Nikhil Kamath distributing free food

Last month, through Zerodha Kamath set aside a corpus of `25 crore towards relief and aid through corporate social responsibility and in his personal capacity. “We have donated part of the money to the Prime Minister’s CARE Fund, the Chief Minister’s Relief Fund and the remaining funds have been put to use in providing free meals through Smally’s Café and medical kits,” said Kamath.

“We decided to contribute in the Action COVID-19 Team (ACT) fund set up by the central government. We try to provide medical equipment wherever there is a shortfall in BBMP hospitals,” he added.

“We had invested in Smally’s Café and when the call came, we decided to partner with Hegde in supplying free meals,” said Kamath. Hegde, who runs four outlets of Smally’s in Bengaluru put his staff to use in sourcing, cooking, packaging and distributing food packets. With him came his friends and well wishers, who have been volunteering with him.

 
We got support from the area corporators for logistics in terms of a place to store and cook large scale meals. We buy 15 to 20 tonnes of fruits every week from farmers and distribute them with the meals,” said Hegde. They now have people across Bengaluru volunteering with them to ensure that the food reaches people on time. “We distribute food to people from Talghattapura to Hegde Nagar and Thanisandra. The need is humongous,” he added. Theywill continue with free meals supply until the lockdown, the two said.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Bengaluru / by Bala Chauhand / Express News Service / April 25th, 2020

The Man Behind Walk-In Kiosks And Disinfectant Tunnels

The designated COVID-19 Hospital (District Hospital, Mysore) on KRS Road has set up low-cost walk-in kiosks at its premises for safe collection of swabs of symptomatic people by the medical staff without direct exposure and contact with patients.

Ramesh Kikkeri
Ramesh Kikkeri

The man behind these walk-in kiosks, known as Swab Testing Cubicles is Ramesh Kikkeri, a resident of Bogadi in city. A post-Graduate in healthcare management and environment management, Ramesh Kikkeri is serving as the Disaster Management Advisor since many years.

Following COVID-19 pandemic, he has voluntarily joined hands with the District Administration and is also serving in the COVID Care Committee.

A team led by Ramesh has installed three Swab Testing Cubicles at the COVID-19 Hospital and has also readied two more STCs which are waiting to be transported to the Mandya District Hospital. Also, Ramesh and team have also installed disinfectant tunnels, which are being used at various places in city.

Shaped like an old telephone booth that is closed from four sides, one side of the Swab Testing Cubicle is made of glass with two openings where detachable and disposable rubber gloves are fixed. The gloves are fixed for the medical staff to insert hands and collect swab samples from symptomatic patients. Also, the medical staff can collect swabs from inside the Swab Testing Cubicles without wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE).

While one Swab Testing Cubicles at the COVID Hospital is made using steel frames, the other two is made with aluminium. The cost of each Swab Testing Cubicle is Rs. 20,000 and as they are light in weight, it could be carried from one place to another.

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Disinfectant Tunnels

To destroy the virus, Sodium Hypochlorite solution is sprayed in the disinfectant tunnels, which have been installed at various places in city and Ramesh has played a major role in readying these disinfectant tunnels and installing them.

While two disinfectant tunnels are installed in K.R. Hospital premises, temporary vegetable markets on M.G. Road and at Alanahalli has one tunnel each, one tunnel each in Central Prisons, Devaraja Market, RMC Market, APMC Yard in Nanjangud and Star of Mysore Office, three tunnels each in Mysuru APMC Yard and L&T company. Ramesh has also given suggestions in the making of Sanitiser Bus by the KSRTC.

Also, the team led by Ramesh has installed the tunnels (one each) at the RMC Market on Sayyaji Rao Road, Central Prison, near Devaraja Market on Dhanvantri Road and at the Nanjangud APMC Yard.  While the cost of most of these disinfectant tunnels has been taken care of by the district administration, some have been sponsored by a few organisations and corporate companies.

No harm in sodium hypochlorite disinfection

“There are rumours doing rounds that spraying sodium hypochlorite solution is harmful. This is false. A few mischief-mongers are spreading such fake messages. As per the recommendation of World Health Organisation (WHO), one kilogram of Sodium Hypochlorite is mixed with 100 litres of water to make a solution, which is being sprayed in the disinfectant tunnels,” Ramesh said.

“Public need not panic while using the disinfectant tunnels. There may be itching sensation for a few persons which is not dangerous. At present, no other chemical apart from sodium hypochlorite has been considered as anti-viral. Until a suitable chemical is made available, Sodium Hypochlorite has to be used,” he added.

Ramesh said that they have so far installed 15 disinfectant tunnels and added that there are demands from private companies to install the tunnels in their premises. He said that each tunnel would cost within Rs. 40,000.

Ramesh Kikkeri can be contacted on Mob:  96205-43516.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Feature Articles / April 19th, 2020

 

Social entrepreneurs help people with disabilities

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Social entrepreneurs Vishnu and Vishal Soman started a volunteer helpline ‘Volunteers vs Covid 19’ to help people with disabilities in Bengaluru during the lockdown. “Accessibility is an issue for this community even without the lockdown. So, we wanted to help them with their basic necessities,” says Vishnu.

They created a system that allowed them to help, while complying with the lockdown rules. “We created a virtual volunteer network. We use existing services such as Dunzo, Swiggy Go and Lalamove India to deliver essentials,” says Abhishek S, a volunteer.

There are 58 volunteers involved, spread across Attibelle to Yelahanka and Nagasandra to KR Puram.

Who gets help?

“A mom in Nagasandra wanted medicines to be delivered to her son with autism at Jayanagar. These are the problems we aim to tackle,” explains Abhishek.

The group focuses on delivering cooked food and groceries in addition to medicines. They also try to provide items free of cost, for those with financial difficulties.

They have a vetting process to ensure that nobody tries to take advantage. “It usually happens on the same day. If the delivery is not urgent, we ask them to wait up to two days,” Vishnu says.

As of April 22, they have helped 2,674 people, with an average of 10-15 deliveries a day. “We have also had transpeople and daily wage earners reach out,” he shares.

The virtual setup is not without its pitfalls. “Coordinating can be challenging, and time-consuming. There have been instances where able-bodied people have tried to use our service. We have minimised this to a large extent,” says Abhishek.

Varalakshmi, a resident of Dasarahalli, used the helpline to avail groceries. The lockdown has been stressful for her family as both, she and her husband, are unemployed currently.
Varalakshmi, a resident of Dasarahalli, used the helpline to avail groceries. The lockdown has been stressful for her family as both, she and her husband, are unemployed currently.

A group that understands

Sashikala, a visually-impaired woman who resides in a PG at Chamrajpet, says she found out about the helpline through WhatsApp. “I needed groceries, a pressure cooker, and an induction stove — it was all delivered the same day,” she says.

Madhumitha Venkataraman, founder of Diversity Dialogues, was already familiar with Vishnu. “While there are many groups working towards helping people, none of them catered to this particular population. There was a need for one that had been created by people who understand disability and is adept at its nuances,” she says.

Knowing sign language, or the importance of medicines makes them more suited to address specific needs. “Many people with disabilities reach out to me for help. So far, whoever I have directed to the group, has received the help they needed,” she adds.

Reach them on their helpline number 90196 63172

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Special Features / by Krupa Joseph / April 23rd, 2020

Citrusy Chakota gets push from BIAL, Horticulture Dept

The Devanahalli Pomelo (chakota), which is almost on the brink of extinction, is set to be rejuvenated and conserved.
The Devanahalli Pomelo (chakota), which is almost on the brink of extinction, is set to be rejuvenated and conserved.

Number of farmers growing the fruit had come down owing to urbanisation and change in landscape

Armed with its unique taste and flavour and a Geographical Indication tag, the Devanahalli Pomelo, the fruit popularly known as chakota, is set to get a push from various quarters.

The Horticulture Department plans to provide the plant to interested farmers in Devanahalli and Doddaballapur regions. Owing to urbanisation and change in landscape, the number of farmers growing the fruit has come down over the years. The fruit is localised in around 13 villages in Devanahalli taluk, eight villages of Sidlaghatta taluk, and seven villages of Doddaballapura taluk.

Joint director of the Horticulture Department, Krishnamurthy, said: “Farmers in these areas grow chakota on the border of their fields or near their homes. This has been the practice for years. After the fruit got the GI tag, farmers are coming forward to grow the plant. The department is using its farms in Chickballapur and Bengaluru Rural district to provide plants for cultivation.”

At Soppahalli farm in Chickballapur, the department will propagate 5,000 plants and provide them to farmers. Guru Kumar, a farmer, said: “Devanahalli is known for chakota. During summer, farmers used to sell it on Devanahalli main road and NH for ₹80 a piece. However, due to lockdown, the demand has come down.”

Bangalore International Airport Ltd. (BIAL), the operator of Kempegowda International Airport, too has taken measures to cultivate the fruit. In a release, BIAL said that under its CSR programme ‘Namma Ooru’, it will come up with an orchard of 500 chakota plants.

BIAL states that with support from the Horticulture Department, 50 plants have been planted on its campus that once was a hub for Pomelo before the construction of the airport. “This location will be developed as an organic Pomelo cultivation demonstration site, with signboards and literature for those interested in learning about the process,” the release said.

The release further states that BIAL intends to promote cultivation of the fruit around the region and create a viable market by collaborating with Indian Council of Agricultural Research and other institutions.

BIAL will also work with farmers in and around Devanahalli to preserve the fruit and promote cultivation by empowering self-help groups and sundertaking tree grafting.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Bengaluru – April 23rd, 2020

From doctors’ heart to know the hearts

A foundation donates ECG machines to Jan Aushadi Kendras in semi-urban, rural areas to help the poor get free tests

An MLA suddenly collapsed while holding a meeting at Kadaba, a small town in Dakshina Kannada, during the lockdown last month. Immediately an ECG test was done at the Pradhan Mantri Jan Aushadi Kendra in the town. As the report suggested medical emergency he was rushed to a Mangaluru hospital within no time.

Ramesh, who manages the centre, had uploaded the report to a WhatsApp group called ‘Kayakalpa’ created by the Cardiology at Doorstep (CAD) Foundation, floated by a group of doctors. Padmanabha Kamath, the chief admin of the group and also Professor and Head of the Department of Cardiology, Kasturba Medical College Hospital, Mangaluru, who read the report suggested immediate medical evacuation of the MLA.

The CAD Foundation had donated the ECG machine to the centre about a year ago. The centre has been doing the ECG test free of cost to many people since then. “It has been immensely helping for people in small places to know their health condition,” Mr. Ramesh told The Hindu.

The foundation has donated the machines to 10 Jan Aushadi Kendras in the coastal and Malnad belt where free ECG tests are being done since at leastsix months. The pharmacists managing those centres have been networked in the ‘Kayakalpa’ group which has two cardiologists. If those who underwent the test agreed, the reports are uploaded and the cardiologists read them and gave their opinion. Those who need further consultation or treatment are free to approach any doctor of their choice anywhere.

Dr. Kamath, who is also the founder of the CAD Foundation, told The Hindu that the other nine machines have been given to the centres in Mundgod, Sirsi, Bhatkal, Sringeri, Siddapura in Udupi district, Kundapura, Belman, Udupi and Mangaluru.

The doctor said that the objective of donating the machines to the centres in semi-urban and rural areas is to strengthen the foundation’s crusade against coronary artery disease, for early diagnosis and prevention, especially among economically weaker sections. With no specialists available in many such places ‘Kayakalpa’ became a platform for interaction among pharmacists, patients and doctors.

Like Vincent D’Souza who managed a centre at Naguri in Mangaluru, some even offered free blood pressure and sugar level tests at such centres. An ECG test outside cost at least ₹250, Mr. D’Souza said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Raviprasad Kamila / Mangaluru – April 22nd, 2020

COVID-19: Bengaluru start-up creates respirator providing over 99 per cent protection to health workers

Deepak and Vic Parmar of  ‘Oxyour’ have developed the prototype of a Powered Air Purifying Respirator.

The respirator consists of a visor that has a tube at the back which connects it to a belt.
The respirator consists of a visor that has a tube at the back which connects it to a belt.

Bengaluru :

Doctors, nurses and other paramedical staff who are at high risk of contracting the COVID-19 when treating critically ill patients can don an almost foolproof safety kit at work by using a super-smart respirator, urges an IT professional, who has developed the product in his home along with a neighbour.

The sophisticated equipment provides 99.97 per cent filtration, way above any of the surgical masks presently in vogue, making it impossible for the virus to enter.

Deepak and Vic Parmar of  ‘Oxyour’ have developed the prototype of a Powered Air Purifying Respirator (PAPR) within a month’s time after reading reports about the virus causing deaths of health professionals in Italy and Spain.

Parmar, who is passionate about electronics, owns a 3D printer, which helped them bring their design to shape easily.

Deepak told the New Indian Expres, “Respirators are popular in the US and the government has banned its export. It is relatively unknown here. With the guidance of our contacts aborad which include pulmonlogists, doctors and even industrial designers, we have been working through the nights to bring it to shape “.

While a respirator in the US costs upto 2000 dollar, it has been developed by the duo for less than Rs 50,000 , he said.

“We want someone to take it up and develop it on a mass scale so that it can reach the health service workers at the earliest. Those with expertise in mass production would do it at a much-reduced cost,” the start-up founder said.

Giving technical details, he said the respirator consists of a visor that has a tube at the back which connects it to a belt.

“Attached to the belt is a bacterial and viral H13 filter. Continuous fresh air is pumped by a mini machine through the tube to the hood and this pushes away potentially germ-filled air away from the nose and mouth of the wearer,” Deepak explains.

The equipment can be disinfected using UV light and used upto three times, he added.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Bengaluru / by S Lalitha / Express News Service / April 22nd, 2020

Mangaluru: Sahyadri startup ‘DreamWorks Makerspace’ deliver face-shields to COVID-19 warriors

DreamWorksBF22apr2020

Mangaluru :

DreamWorks Makerspace at Sahyadri College of Engineering & Management, Mangaluru has been manufacturing and delivering face-shields to help the frontline healthcare professionals fight against COVID-19.

They have delivered over 500 face-shields to Shivamogga Police on April 16. They have successfully delivered 2000+ face-shields since April 2 and are continuously working to cater to the requirements.

Face shields are an urgent requirement in the nation’s fight against COVID-19 in order to help scale manufacturing to meet needs. Face shields are a key piece of equipment for front-line healthcare workers operating in close contact with COVID-19 patients. These face shields can protect a healthcare professional and COVID warriors from exposure to droplets containing the virus expelled by patients when they cough or sneeze.

source: http://www.daijiworld.com / DaijiWorld.com / Home> Campus Beat / by Media Release / April 19th, 2020