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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 362

Boston 25 News

Boston 25 spotlights how a team of MIT researchers is working on developing an inexpensive alternative to traditional ventilators that could be rapidly manufactured around the world. “The key to the simple, inexpensive ventilator alternative is a hand-operated plastic pouch called a bab-valve resuscitator or Ambu bag, which hospitals already have on hand in large quantities,” reports Boston 25.

The Washington Post

Prof. Jonathan Gruber writes for The Washington Post about how to cover the costs of care of uninsured patients who need medical care for Covid-19. “We need to move quickly to make sure that financial issues don’t place any unnecessary barriers in the way of effective treatment of covid-19 patients,” writes Gruber.

Washington Post

MIT alumnus Michael Sorkin, “a fiery champion of social justice and sustainability in architecture and urban planning, who emerged as one of his profession’s most incisive public intellectuals over a multifaceted career as a critic, author, teacher and designer,” died on March 26, reports Harrison Smith for The Washington Post.

Boston Globe

Boston Globe correspondent Meghan Sorensen spotlights the work of Ellen Swallow Richards, the first woman admitted to MIT. Sorensen notes that Richards was “a pioneer in the field of sanitary engineering and a founder of home economics in the United States.”

Reuters

Reuters reporters Ann Saphir and Jeff Mason write that a new study by Prof. Emil Verner finds that during the 1918 flu epidemic cities that responded aggressively had fewer deaths and emerged from the pandemic with stronger economic growth. “One can do those types of quite gruesome calculations” says Verner. But evidence suggests “that in some sense, that’s a false tradeoff.”

Popular Mechanics

Popular Mechanics reporter Courney Linder writes that MIT researchers are developing an alternative design for an emergency ventilator using Ambu resuscitation bags found in hospitals. “MIT is adapting the Ambu bags by creating a mechanism that can automate the squeezing and releasing motions,” Linder explains.

Quartz

Quartz reporter John Detrixhe writes that a new study co-authored by Prof. Emil Verner finds that “aggressive social distancing measures, while extremely disruptive to commerce in the near term, can result in faster economic growth when the disease subsides.”

New York Times

New York Times reporter Joseph Giovanni memorializes the life and work of MIT alumnus Michael Sorkin. Sorkin was “one of architecture’s most outspoken public intellectuals, a polymath whose prodigious output of essays, lectures and designs, all promoting social justice, established him as the political conscience in the field.”

Forbes

Forbes contributor Eva Amsen writes that MIT researchers have transformed the biochemical properties of proteins into music, and then used those musical compositions to create new proteins. By converting protein structures into music, the researchers “have created a library of music fragments that directly correspond to the kind of protein structures that you would find in real, existing proteins.”

NBC News

Prof. Sherry Turkle speaks with NBC News about how the Covid-19 pandemic has inspired people around the world to use the Internet in new and creative ways to connect. "Every group I'm in is trying to reinvent itself in an online form," says Turkle. "You see people trying to find something of themselves that they can use as the medium to express themselves."

Bloomberg

A new paper co-authored by Prof. Emil Verner finds that public health measures like social distancing aimed at curbing the spread of Covid-19 may be better for economic growth than laxer measures, reports Max Reyes for Bloomberg. The researchers found that “cities that implemented more rapid and forceful non-pharmaceutical health interventions do not experience worse downturns.”

The Wall Street Journal

MIT researchers have launched a mobile phone app aimed at tracking the spread of Covid-19, reports Douglas Belkin and Kirsten Grind for The Wall Street Journal. “Stopping epidemics is a game of numbers. It’s not about getting everybody or nobody (quarantined),” explains Prof. Ramesh Raskar. “The models show that even at 10% there will be gains.”

Boston Globe

Profs. Simon Johnson and Retsef Levi write for The Boston Globe about how they are developing risk analytics tools to help government officials determine the Covid-19 risk for specific communities. “There’s more we can and should do to focus on high-risk patients and high-risk clusters,” they write. “It’s essential we pursue these strategies immediately to avoid choosing between collapsing our economy or our health care system.”

Guardian

Guardian reporter Oliver Wainwright writes that Prof. Carlo Ratti is developing a prototype for transforming shipping containers into portable pods that could be used to expand a hospital’s intensive care space for Covid-19 patients. “The key thing is the ease with which you can move these pods around,” says Ratti. “The advantage of the shipping container is that the infrastructure for moving them already exists.”

Boston Herald

Boston Herald reporter Stefan Geller writes that MIT researchers are working on developing a low-cost ventilator to help hospitals meet the growing demand caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. The team is developing a “mechanically operated bag-valve resuscitator, which is an inexpensive alternative to a ventilator that currently only works by being hand-operated.”