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Ļć½¶Ö±²„engineering students deliver mask disinfectant box to Metro Ambulance in Meridian

Ļć½¶Ö±²„engineering students deliver mask disinfectant box to Metro Ambulance in Meridian

Ļć½¶Ö±²„and Metro Ambulance Personnel take a photo around the mask disinfectant box
Representatives from Ļć½¶Ö±²„and Metro Ambulance Service gather after Ļć½¶Ö±²„delivered a mask disinfectant device to Metro Ambulance for use by emergency medical technicians and paramedics. (Photo by Lisa Sollie)

Contact: James Carskadon

Justin Easley, Ryden Smith and Clayton Cobler photographed around the mask disinfectant device
Justin Easley, left, an Ļć½¶Ö±²„sophomore mechanical engineering student from Starkville, and Ryden Smith, a mechanical engineering masterā€™s student from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, show the UV disinfectant box they built to Metro Ambulance Service Director Clayton Cobler. (Photo by Lisa Sollie)

MERIDIAN, Miss.ā€”Emergency medical technicians and paramedics at Metro Ambulance Service have a new, fast way to disinfect their masks courtesy of a device designed and built by Mississippi State students.

A team from Ļć½¶Ö±²„delivered the device, a tool box outfitted with ultraviolet lights, to Metro Ambulance this past week. As EMTs and paramedics complete their shift, they will be able to sanitize their masks in approximately 30 minutes, extending the lifespan of their personal protective equipment. The apparatus can be used to disinfect cloth, surgical and N-95 masks.

ā€œThis device will allow us to refurbish our masks the medics wear and have them sanitized,ā€ said Clayton Cobler. Metro Ambulance Service director. ā€œWith that peace of mind, they can put them on, go back out and still be protected. This saves money because we can re-use the N-95 masks. We donā€™t have to trash them after every shift and get new ones.ā€

The first disinfectant box was built at MSUā€™s Center for Advanced Vehicular Systems in April after the universityā€™s John C. Longest Student Health Center requested it amid a national shortage of personal protective equipment. Within two weeks, the device was designed, built and delivered by students in MSUā€™s Bagley College of Engineering with support from faculty and staff at CAVS. The students built another device for the Mississippi Veterans Home in Kosciusko.

Ļć½¶Ö±²„has worked to make the technology publicly available through its Office of Technology Management. The university joined the COVID-19 Technology Access Framework, a consortium of institutions dedicated to providing fast and royalty-free access to technologies that can be used fight the pandemic.

ā€œWe have designed this to be affordable, portable and effective,ā€ said Ryden Smith, a second-year masterā€™s student in mechanical engineering who built the device. ā€œI think this is an incredible opportunity to help our healthcare providers by giving them something that can help keep them safe while theyā€™re on the front lines.ā€

To download the design plans for the box, which can be built using readily-available items, visit .

Ļć½¶Ö±²„is Mississippiā€™s leading university, available online at .