This Yellowknife couple is using 3D printing to make masks more comfortable - Action News
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This Yellowknife couple is using 3D printing to make masks more comfortable

With health-care workers required to wear protective masks for hours every day, a Yellowknife doctor and her husband took to 3D printing to offer some relief.

Health-care workers required to wear protective masks for hours every day

Eric McNair-Landry and Kate Breen, pictured here during a trip across Baffin Island. The couple has started 3D printing mask tension relievers at their home for health-care workers in Yellowknife. (Submitted by Eric McNair-Landry)

Photos of health-care workers' sore and swollen faces are going viral on social media, as many are forced to don uncomfortable protective equipment to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

That prompted one Yellowknife doctor and her 3D printing enthusiast husband to come up with a solution.

"In the emergency departments we're now using face masks a lot more frequently basically with every patient that we see," explained Dr. Kate Breen. "So a mask that would typically be worn for a single patient encounter we wear for potentially hours at a time."

Those masks are equipped with elastic loops that go behind the ears and keep the mask tight vital, but very uncomfortable, Breen said.

"After a couple hours, I found that my ears were getting really achy," she said. "And the nurses were agreeing 'we're getting chaffed back there.'"

For a while, Breen and her colleagues struggled along with finicky solutions involving paper clips and hair ties. But those made it harder to remove the masks, and increased the risk of contamination.

So Breen and her husband, Eric McNair-Landry, put their considerable minds to work finding a way to keep the masks effective while making them a little more comfortable.

Fortunately, it was a problem that health-care workers around the world were more than familiar with.

McNair-Landry found a variety of straps and buckles online designed to alleviate the pressure of medical masks. After trying a few different models, they settled on one they liked from the online library Thingiverse.

"It's basically a very thin plastic strap that fits kind of behind the head," he explained. "The [part of the] mask that normally loops around the ears loops around these little holders in this plastic frame."

A 3D printer in McNair-Landry's home prints two mask tension relievers in black and white. (Submitted by Eric McNair-Landry)

McNair-Landry took to his workshop to fire up his 3D printer, and started an assembly line.

"It's kind of the joy of 3D printing," he said. "Once you've designed it, it's pretty quick to replicate."

"It works great actually," said Breen. "They are super popular in emergency where I work."

McNair-Landry said he's made about 30 so far, and hopes to make 50 or 60 before he switches projects.

"We'll try to meet the need," he said.

Once he's done that, he said, the couple will focus on printing face shields, following in the footsteps of fellow 3D printers elsewhere in the North.

Written by John Last, based on an interview by Lawrence Nayally produced by Joanne Stassen