Health and Healthcare Systems

From dining pods to see-through masks: 6 ways innovations are helping in the pandemic

A delivery robot from the company ''Starship'' is seen, as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in Milton Keynes, Britain, April 21, 2020. REUTERS/Andrew Boyers - RC229G9I2E2O

Delivery robots have been transporting vital supplies in the UK during the lockdown. Image: REUTERS/Andrew Boyers

Harry Kretchmer
Senior Writer, Forum Agenda
  • While the pandemic has brought many challenges, restrictions like social distancing rules and staff shortages are driving considerable innovation.
  • Some are brilliantly simple - like a mask with a transparent mouth-guard to help deaf people lip read.
  • Many innovations are in the field of robotics, from restaurant deliveries to cleaning.

It’s more than five months since Wuhan, the city where the coronavirus outbreak began, went into lockdown marking the beginning of COVID-19 restrictions.

In that time, there have been many innovative ideas to help us live with the virus and return to work and leisure safely.

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The World Economic Forum’s crowdsourcing platform UpLink is looking for the best solutions around the world to tackle today’s most pressing issues.

Here are six areas of everyday life where inventions are easing the challenges posed by the pandemic.

1. Dining out

At the height of the lockdown, retail analysts, Kantar, studied social media for clues about what people were most looking forward to doing when lockdowns were eased. The top three desires included eating out and going to a bar with friends.

Social activities are top of people’s wish lists after lockdown. Image: Kantar

But with social distancing measures in place for such businesses, attention has turned to how to keep customers safe and inspire trust.

French designer Christophe Gernigon has created oversized transparent lampshades, allowing diners to eat in a personal bubble. The ‘PLEX'EAT’ prototypes are made from perspex.

A woman poses under a Plex'Eat prototype plexiglas bubble by designer Christophe Gernigon which surrounds diners to protect them from the novel coronavirus during a presentation in Cormeilles-en-Parisis, near Paris, as restaurants in France prepare to re-open post-lockdown, May 20, 2020. Picture taken May 20, 2020.  REUTERS/Benoit Tessier     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY - RC2XSG96SXL1
Parisians can now dine under suspended clear plastic cones. Image: REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

In the Netherlands, Amsterdam’s ETEN restaurant has also been making dining safer. On the banks of a canal it has installed glass houses to protect dining companions, and help with social distancing.

Meanwhile in South Korea, popular watering holes are devising more hi-tech ways to protect patrons: robot bartenders.

One - named ‘Cabo’ can carve a perfect spherical ice ball for whisky ‘on the rocks’. Another can measure out cocktail liquor from 25 bottles hanging from the ceiling.

2. Shopping

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Grocery shopping boomed during the pandemic, with much of the growth coming from online - a service relied on by many of those shielding from the virus.

But many of those most at risk from COVID-19 are still wary of coming into stores, in part because of the possibility of the virus living on surfaces which are frequently touched - like the handle on a fridge door.

A Finnish supermarket created an innovative solution - long, curved handles that allow customers to open chiller cabinets with their clothed arms instead of hands.

3. Communicating

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Masks are mandatory - and essential - in many settings, especially on public transport and in shops. However, for those who are deaf, they can cause a real problem: they cover lips, making it impossible to lip-read.

This was the experience of a deaf tailor from Indonesia who faced a daily struggle with new regulations mandating mask wearing in public places.

Her solution is brilliantly simple: she has created masks with a clear plastic window over the mouth - making it possible to lip-read once again.

Another communication innovation takes the form of a robot. ‘Pepper’ is a humanoid robot who can be found at a Tokyo hotel. But it is no ordinary hotel: its patients are those who have mild coronavirus symptoms.

Pepper’s job is to greet patients as they arrive - making them feel welcome, but also protecting - and freeing up - staff.

4. Cleaning

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Some of the most creative solutions have come from the world of robotics.

Refugees at the Za’atari refugee camp in Jordan have developed a LEGO robot that automatically dispenses hand sanitizer - reducing the risk of infection.

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Elsewhere, robots are cleaning all kinds of surfaces. Meet "Ugo", the remote-controlled robot developed by Japanese start-up Mira Robotics.

It uses ultraviolet light to kill viruses, and can patrol buildings and clean on its own.

5. Home deliveries

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Around the world, robots are being enlisted to help with deliveries of food.

U.S. start-up Starship Technologies is rolling out its food delivery boxes on wheels to a range of urban areas, from Milton Keynes, England to Fairfax, Virginia, U.S.

Colombian start-up Rappi is another company whose boxy wheeled robots have moved onto the pavements in greater numbers during the pandemic.

6. Social distancing

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At the heart of most nations’ public health strategies to fight COVID-19 is effective social distancing. But sometimes people need to be reminded. Singapore has chosen a robot for this task.

Made by U.S. company Boston Dynamics, ‘Spot’ patrols the park and reminds visitors to maintain social distancing: “Let's keep Singapore healthy. For your own safety, and for those around you, please stand at least one metre apart. Thank you.”

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The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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