The University at Buffalo has donated more than 200 reusable 3D-printed face masks and 100 face shields to the Buffalo City Mission for distribution to its clients and staff.

Delivered Tuesday to the Buffalo City Mission’s Alfiero Family Center of Hope and Promise by UB faculty, the masks and face shields were created by UB’s 3D printing group, which formed at the start of the pandemic as a partnership among faculty, staff and students in the School of Dental Medicine, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. Approximately 30 UB students and fellows were involved in designing and producing the face masks and shields.

“We sincerely thank the University at Buffalo community for this thoughtful and inspiring gift,” said Aubrey Calhoun, associate executive director of the Buffalo City Mission. “Throughout the pandemic, our staff continues to closely follow health and safety standards as we serve our region’s homeless. These masks and face shields will help our team to continue this important work, and exemplify the very best of how creativity and humanity can come together to help our neighbors in need.”

Michael O’Hara, manager of major gifts for the Buffalo City Mission added: “You can imagine how lonely it can feel if you work in a field addressing needs that never seem to diminish. The work of restoring the lives of our homeless neighbors feels very much like that at times, until a group of professionals, leaders, educators, and experts across different fields, connected by a stellar organization such as University at Buffalo, and pulled together by a desire to address a critical need, reaches out to us to be a very tangible help in our day to day activities. This act of kindness has not only equipped us, but also encouraged us.”

‘For the greater good’

“The idea of harnessing the university’s broad expertise for the greater good during these extraordinarily challenging times was the primary motivating factor for all of us,” said Peter Elkin, MD, professor and chair, Department of Biomedical Informatics in the Jacobs School.

Early in the pandemic, the 3D printing group at UB began working with the Buffalo chapter of e-NABLE, the international, open-source 3D printing movement that has stepped up during the pandemic to produce personal protective equipment for communities all over the world.

“e-NABLE has been a great partner,” said Albert Titus, PhD, professor and chair, Department of Biomedical Engineering in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and the Jacobs School, “as they are an existing network of 3D printing and design enthusiasts who donate their time to solve broad challenges.”

Together with the UB group, members of the Buffalo chapter of e-NABLE developed designs and physical prototypes; they also published the designs so that anyone could produce the face shields and masks.

Clear, plastic mask enables social interactions

The UB group is also launching a new design of a clear plastic mask that enables robust communications and social interactions, while maintaining safety. The first of these are part of the UB donation to the Buffalo City Mission.

“When the pandemic hit in February, our lab in the dental school began generating the 3D-printed mask designed by the Billings Clinic in Montana,” said Praveen Arany, DDS, PhD, assistant professor of oral biology, School of Dental Medicine. “This led to
the creation of the 3D printing group that my lab has participated in. We generate several unique products as dental face shields, comfort bands and clear masks that are available as a community service to the university and WNY community.”

In collaboration with Jacobs School faculty and students led by Elkin, the group designed and produced various types of masks and shields. With the assistance of community members Marge Elkin and Betty Jean Grant, Elkin then coordinated the donation with the Buffalo City Mission.

Materials and resources to design and produce the masks and face shields were made possible through funding from several sources, including Buffalo Blue Sky, the program of the Office of the Vice President for Research that provides seed funding for innovative team science. In addition, Jim Whitlock, associate director of computer services at UB, and Pete Suffoletto, a UB alumnus and CEO of PVS Process Equipment, Inc., made significant donations of labor and funds to bring the project to fruition.

School of Dental Medicine students who participated include: Philip Sales; Jacob Graca; Shaina Chechang; Kierra Bleyle; Savannah Tomaka; Jay Ciano; Preethi Singh; Danielle Detwiler; Omer Hillel; Yianni Savidis; Hunter LaRosa; Brett Lashlee; Jaewon Kim; Georgia Kyriacou; Abigail Romano; Bishoy Seliman; Michael Casab; Joseph Lippa; Charles Kane; Briana Sambuchi; Tiffany Mai and Amine Benaffane.

Clinical Informatics fellows at the Jacobs School who participated are Gabriel Anaya, MD; Brianne MacKenzie, MD; Gillian Franklin, MD, PhD; and Kendria Hall, MD. Aaron Gorsline, a student in the Department of Biomedical Engineering in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences also participated.

The University at Buffalo is a premier research-intensive public university, the largest and most comprehensive campus in the State University of New York. UB’s nearly 30,000 students pursue their academic interests through more than 300 undergraduate, graduate and professional degree programs. Founded in 1846, the University at Buffalo is a member of the Association of American Universities.