As medical facilities deal with an unprecedented influx of patients in the wake of a global pandemic, 麻豆入口 contractors that specialize in negative airflow HVAC system installation and maintenance are in high demand.
Mission Critical
As medical facilities deal with an unprecedented influx of patients in the wake of a global pandemic, 麻豆入口 contractors that specialize in negative airflow HVAC system installation and maintenance are in high demand.
When an Indianapolis area hospital needed to quickly overhaul its HVAC system to maximize rooms for COVID-19 patients and prepare for the inevitable surge, they reached out to 麻豆入口 contractor Poynter Sheet Metal. Employees at the Greenwood, Indiana-based company worked overnight fabricating and installing ductwork to meet the hospital鈥檚 emergency timetable.
And when the owners of a medical facility in Albuquerque, New Mexico, wanted to change the air pressure in some of the patient rooms to limit the spread of contagious viruses like COVID-19, they hired Energy Balance & Integration, another 麻豆入口 contractor.
As the United States and much of the world works to stop the spread of coronavirus, an illness that currently has no vaccine or cure and only limited treatments, many hospitals are expanding operations and converting underused areas into patient rooms. In many cases, even after such efforts, demand for hospital beds still exceeds available supply. So local governments are transforming buildings such as hotels and convention centers into makeshift treatment centers.
But when dealing with a highly contagious, airborne pathogen such as coronavirus, installing patient areas is a lot more complicated than just placing beds and privacy curtains on a floor. In many cases, treatment facilities including units and sometimes whole floors must be placed under negative air pressure to prevent the spread of contaminants. Typically known as isolation rooms, the HVAC systems that serve these areas are designed to remove viruses and exhaust them outside while preventing the contamination of adjacent spaces.
Needed Expertise
That鈥檚 where the expertise of 麻豆入口 contractors such as Poynter and testing and air balancing contractors like EB&I comes in. Companies that have extensive experience working in health care facilities and certifying the performance of the HVAC systems hospitals contain are finding their work in urgent demand. In fact, at a time when many states are forcing businesses to temporarily close to limit the spread of coronavirus, the work performed by 麻豆入口 members with expertise in HVAC system testing, adjusting and balancing (TAB) has been deemed 鈥渆ssential鈥 and therefore exempt from such regulations. In many cases, the work is absolutely vital.
Eli Howard, 麻豆入口鈥檚 executive director of technical services, said that with the years of specialized training they complete, it鈥檚 understandable that the association鈥檚 members are currently involved in so many important health care projects. 鈥淚t鈥檚 critical to make sure that these facilities are up and operational and they鈥檙e able to be maintained from an HVAC standpoint during this pandemic,鈥 said Howard.
Emergency Projects
Just ask Joseph Lansdell, the owner and president of Poynter Sheet Metal (and 2016鈥17 麻豆入口 president). His company has been on the frontlines of the Indianapolis area鈥檚 fight against COVID-19.
Poynter was recently brought in to install negative air spaces for COVID-19 patients at a local hospital after a water damage restoration company could not complete the project. Poynter, which works closely with a local testing and balancing contractor, had previous experience converting large sections of hospital facilities to negative air environments.
Since the Indianapolis area was seeing a surge in coronavirus cases at the time, the hospital needed the spaces converted to negative pressure as soon as possible. Poynter immediately brought in a crew, decked in personal protective equipment (PPE), to handle the project. They completed the work in a matter of days.
鈥淲e ended up fabricating ductwork and installing throughout the night to create the negative air space,鈥 Lansdell said.
Despite the deadline-driven nature of hospital work in the current crisis, Lansdell said his company still tries to find the best solution for customers. That was the case when officials at the same hospital contacted Poynter a few days after its all-night work to install the negative airflow environments.
This time, officials said the hospital was at capacity and in need of even more negative air spaces. Their idea was to have Poynter install an extensive network of fans, eliminating some private and semi-private hospital rooms in the process.
Poynter officials told the hospital that wasn鈥檛 necessary. Because of Poynter鈥檚 lengthy track record doing hospital air pressure projects, the company said it had a solution that would be easier to install and work better.
鈥淲e said you could just sacrifice one room or one area and create the negative fan room out of it, and then run the duct over the top. And you have one filter that takes care of multiple rooms,鈥 Lansdell said. 鈥淎nd so we ended up going back in the very next weekend and converting and expanding their negative air space.鈥
Increasing Demand
About 1,300 miles away, Anthony Kocurek, the owner of Energy Balance & Integration, is also seeing an increase in demand for his services. At a time when other businesses in New Mexico are shut down and furloughing workers, the Albuquerque company, like Poynter in Indiana, has also been deemed critical by state and local officials.
For Kocurek, it鈥檚 meant the slowdowns related to coronavirus affecting so many construction firms haven鈥檛 hit his TAB company, which counts a lot of the large hospitals in the region as among its clients.
鈥淲e鈥檝e not really felt any kind of a hiccup so far,鈥 Kocurek said. 鈥淚n the last two weeks, our workload has really increased because of the work that they want to do in these hospitals. I鈥檓 probably going to be hiring a couple of apprentices because we鈥檝e just been tagged to try to convert an old hospital here into an emergency isolation setup for COVID-19.鈥
Ventilation protocols designed to prevent disease spread don鈥檛 do much good if the HVAC systems necessary to ensure they鈥檙e being followed aren鈥檛 working properly 鈥 and that鈥檚 where EB&I comes in.
鈥淲e fine tune it so that the airflow values, the air changes in each of these rooms are what the engineers designed for,鈥 Kocurek said.
Just like at Poynter, many of these coronavirus-related conversion projects that EB&I are involved in require employees to take precautions to prevent disease spread. While working while wearing protective gear is nothing new for EB&I employees, Kocurek said every facility is slightly different when it comes to the health and safety protocols hospital administrators want them to follow.
Kocurek said his employees are understandably worried about working in environments where there are known COVID cases, but no one has turned down any assignments.
鈥淭hey have a heightened awareness of what鈥檚 going on,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey do a lot of communication with people at the hospital to ensure that we鈥檙e not crossing paths. All of the guys I鈥檝e talked to are kind of excited about being able to do something positive and help out.鈥
Published: March 31, 2020
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