A critical review of initial 3D printed products responding to COVID-19 health and supply chain challenges

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Novak, James I
Loy, Jennifer
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2020
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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic significantly increased demand for medical and protective equipment by frontline health workers, as well as the general community, causing the supply chain to stretch beyond capacity, an issue further heightened by geographical and political lockdowns. Various 3D printing technologies were quickly utilised by businesses, institutions and individuals to manufacture a range of products on-demand, close to where they were needed. This study gathered data about 91 3D printed projects initiated prior to April 1, 2020, as the virus spread globally. It found that 60% of products were for personal protective equipment, of which 62% were 3D printed face shields. Fused filament fabrication was the most common 3D print technology used, and websites were the most popular means of centralising project information. The project data provides objective, quantitative insight balanced with qualitative critical review of the broad trends, opportunities and challenges that could be used by governments, health and medical bodies, manufacturing organisations and the 3D printing community to streamline the current response, as well as plan for future crises using a distributed, flexible manufacturing approach.

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Emerald Open Research

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2

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© 2020 Novak JI and Loy J. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Supply chains

Additive manufacturing

Design for disaster relief

Industrial and product design

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Novak, JI; Loy, J, A critical review of initial 3D printed products responding to COVID-19 health and supply chain challenges, Emerald Open Research, 2, pp. 24-24

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