Johns Hopkins's Improved Ebola Suit
The winning design, via Twitter

An improved Ebola-fighting suit designed by a team of doctors, engineers, and at least one wedding-dress designer at Johns Hopkins in October just won funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development.

The problems with the current Ebola suits worn by front-line caregivers in the fight against the disease are many. Mostly they are too hot and far too complicated to remove.

The Hopkins suit confronts those issues and more. A rechargeable battery pack blows dry air into the hood to evaporate sweat off the wearerโ€™s skin. A relocated zipper and a few pull tabs simplify the doffing process; it used to take 20 steps and a friend. Now it only takes โ€œfive or sixโ€ and can be done by oneself. The hoodโ€™s transparent visor is enlarged to let the worker see more and to project a โ€œless intimidating appearance.โ€

The award will fund the project all the way to the completion of a โ€œproduct design that is ready to be taken up by a major manufacturer, or several, for large-scale production and distribution.โ€

Here is a 93-second video that demonstrates the new suitโ€™s innovations:

YouTube video