From the BBC:
Academics at De Montfort
University made prosthetic sockets using recycled plastic bottles Plastic bottles have been turned into the
sockets for prosthetic limbs by university experts. The engineer behind the
technique hopes it could reduce the cost of the sockets, which join artificial
limbs to the body, from £5,000 to £10. De Montfort University engineers ground
plastic bottles down to makes polyester yarns, which were heated and moulded to
create the sockets. The sockets were tested at a rehabilitation charity in
India. The average cost of producing a socket is £5,000, but the university
believes using recycled material could reduce the cost to as little as £10 and
help tackle plastic pollution. Dr Karthikeyan Kandan said two amputees who
tried out the products in Jaipur were "really impressed". He said:
"The aim of this project was to identify cheaper materials that we could
use to help these people." The yarns made from the ground-down bottles are
heated to form a solid, lightweight material which is moulded into prosthetic
sockets. The technique was used to
produce prosthetic limb sockets for two amputees in India The prosthetic sockets have to be tailor-made
for each user. Two were made in
Leicester and taken to India to trial on two patients from Bhagwan Mahaveer
Viklang Sahayata Samiti - an organisation which helps rehabilitate disabled
people. "Both patients were really
impressed," Dr Kandan said. "Upcycling of recycled plastics and
offering affordable prosthesis are two major global issues that we need to
tackle."
^ This could be great news. It
really depends on how more people who use prosthetics feel about the final
product. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-leicestershire-49406298
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