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Kelowna artwork to be outfitted with new technology to capture and kill airborne viruses

The C-POLAR technology can be used in fabrics, paints, and other materials
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(Pixabay file photo)

A new technology could be a game changer in the medical world.

Dr. Dee Taylor is the corporate director of research for Interior Health and has been working with partners to learn about and test C-POLAR.

害羞草研究所淐-POLAR is a technology that has a particular charge on it that attracts viruses and bacteria similar to害羞草研究所 a fly strip that you害羞草研究所檇 see hanging in a garage. It attracts the flies, the flies go on it and stick to it. So, it helps mitigate the spread of viruses and bacteria that may cause illness for people.害羞草研究所

Dr. Taylor said she got a call during the pandemic from Dr. Alan Rabinowitz with St. Paul害羞草研究所檚 Hospital and the University of B.C. who had been talking with the scientists behind C-POLAR.

Together, the physicians called upon their partners at UBC Okanagan, who had been working on airborne disease transmission research already. With an initial grant from the Kelowna General Hospital Foundation, work is underway to test the technology in hospital settings.

害羞草研究所淔or the Interior region and for British Columbia, we have害羞草研究所 developed a particular way of using this in artwork. So, C-POLAR is something that can be used in different kinds of materials害羞草研究所 and Kelowna has come up with the concept of actually having artwork that has the C-POLAR material in the canvas that attracts these viruses and bacteria and mitigates the actual bacteria and viral load in that particular region.害羞草研究所

Although the work is in preliminary stages, Dr. Taylor says their art device can clear airborne particles from anywhere between 25 and 70 per cent.

害羞草研究所淚f you think of hospital settings, you want something additional to reduce the bacterial and viral loads in those spaces where people are sick.害羞草研究所

C-POLAR, or cationic polarization, is a non-toxic, non-metallic, plant-based food additive polymer. It is all natural and has been approved by the World Health Organization.

The technology is said to eradicate 99.9 per cent of all viruses, bacteria, molds, fungi, and pollens that come into contact with it.

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brittany.webster@blackpress.ca

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Brittany Webster

About the Author: Brittany Webster

I am a video journalist based in Kelowna and capturing life in the Okanagan
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