An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Local News | July 22, 2021

AFRL SBIR Partnership Thinks Outside of the Box with Covid-19 Enclosure

Article written by Jim Ingram - Rising to the world’s daily challenges through technology is the very fiber of the Air Force Research Laboratory’s (AFRL) Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program. That resilient drive and dedication endures with a new medical device inspired by the heroic staff battling COVID-19.

The idea for their protective barrier enclosure (STAT Enclosure) for health care providers, created by Justin Rice and Dr. Steve Venticinque of Olifant Medical in San Antonio, Texas, began as both witnessed the COVID-19 crisis firsthand.
“The COVID-19 call came out and Dr. Venticinque was a part of the response planning and effort in San Antonio where it got pretty bad for quite a while,” Rice, who’s worked in the medical device field for more than a decade, said. “As an anesthesiologist-intensivist he was in the operating room and intensive care units taking care of COVID-19 patients and had an idea (after) he started seeing the plexiglass box enclosures providers were using to protect themselves while inserting breathing tubes into patients.” With the plexiglass enclosures being deemed very cumbersome, Dr. Venticinque – who’s background includes being a critical care air transport physician and a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel -- began thinking about how medical staff could treat and transfer high-risk COVID patients more safely and effectively.

Meanwhile, Rice, who’s wife was also working with critically ill COVID-19 patients in the Denver area at the time, was likewise looking for a way to ameliorate the situation for staff.
“Having a spouse taking care of COVID patients and having about 20 physicians I knew that were all in COVID wards masked up, that were at risk, (concerned me). It was a pretty emotional time for anyone related to healthcare workers,” Rice recalled.

The STAT Enclosure is a protective barrier used for endotracheal intubation and other procedures that are aerosol (droplet) generating. It’s equipped with ports to allow health care provider’s hands inside to treat the patient while minimizing the risk to themselves or their assistants.

“It has a suction port that attaches to a wall suction, which helps reduce particle counts. While it looks simple, it’s probably the most difficult device that I have ever had to manufacture,” Rice said.
Olifant then turned to the fertile ecosystem in its backyard of San Antonio to create and test the STAT Enclosure and eventually bring it to market. “We put it in the hands of users. So, we approached everyone from pulmonologists, respiratory therapists, critical care physicians, and anesthesiologists and had them evaluate the technology,” Rice said.

It was during this phase that Rice and Dr. Venticinque decided to approach the AFRL SBIR program for help in bringing the STAT Enclosure into existence, capitalizing on their connections from Olifant’s previous successes with the program.
“As we were developing our enclosure, we realized there was likely the need to tailor it to military specifications, such as being able to attach it to a gurney and to develop portable vacuum pump. The need to adapt our technology to DoD needs aligned with the SBIR program,” Rice explained. “Our adaptations have led to a dual-use, civilian and military technology that is even more robust than our original ideation.”

Olifant was able to enter as a Direct-to-Phase II because of the relationships the company had built within the program from previous submissions. Leveraging the AFWERX Open Topic Solicitation, Olifant’s SBIR proposal was expedited in just three weeks. Once again, they turned to the talents of many others within the San Antonio area, including the Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired, who manufactured the devices, and the 59th Medical Wing.
“I’m the biggest fan of working with the 59th Medical Wing through this whole process,” Rice said. “We went from an idea, to concept, to bringing products to the market in roughly three months. Because of the large medical ecosystem in San Antonio, we were able to work through the user need gathering and developmental efforts in a very brief period of time.”

Olifant recently completed the adapted STAT Enclosure’s first production run and is currently working towards a Phase III SBIR for continued manufacturing and procurement. The device is also versatile, being potentially useful for aerosol-transmissible diseases aside from COVID-19.

Rice admitted the AFRL SBIR program can be intimidating to some at first, but the experience has been everything he and Olifant had hoped.
“I think a lot of people are scared to work with the (AFRL SBIR) because of all the unknowns. But I have yet to find an unhelpful person,” he said.
Learn how you can receive funding to develop your technology solutions to our warfighter by visiting Air Force Tech Connect at https://airforcetechconnect.org/ and Air Force SBIRSTTR at https://www.afsbirsttr.af.mil/!
BETHESDA, Md. (Nov. 21, 2024) Naval Medical Research Command (NMRC)’s Clinical Trials Center (CTC) is seeking volunteers to participate in a phase 1 clinical trial for a vaccine aimed at reducing frequency and severity of infections caused by Staphylococcus aureus bacteria, a leading cause of skin and soft tissue infections. NMRC CTC is located at Naval Support Activity Bethesda, Building 17B (2nd floor), and can be contacted at 301-295-4735 (call) or 301-233-9640 (text), or via e-mail at usn.nmrc.ctc@health.mil to schedule an appointment. NMRC is engaged in a broad spectrum of activity from basic science in the laboratory to field studies in austere and remote areas of the world to investigations in operational environments. In support of the Navy, Marine Corps, and joint U.S. warfighters, researchers study infectious diseases, biological warfare detection and defense, combat casualty care, environmental health concerns, aerospace and undersea medicine, medical modeling, simulation, operational mission support, epidemiology and behavioral sciences. (U.S. Navy Photo by Tommy Lamkin/Released)

Clinical Trials Center Seeks Volunteers for Stap...

Local News
Apr. 11, 2025

Staphylococcus aureus can impact readiness, and due to the antimicrobial resistance of the bacteria, keep...
Read More
Collage of four images of uniformed physical therapists helping patients complete upper body exercises.

Reducing Impact of Upper Extremity Injuries With...

Local News
Apr. 10, 2025

Service members experience 25 million limited duty days annually due to injuries, most of which are...
Read More
Staff Sgt. Sebastiana Lopez Arellano, a patient at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, pulls a weighted sled around a track inside the center’s Military Advanced Training Center, which provides amputee patients with state-of-the-art care, in Bethesda, Md., April 13, 2016. Lopez lost her right leg and suffered several other injuries in a motorcycle crash in 2015. She now uses sports and fitness as part of her physical and occupational therapy regimen. (U.S. Air Force photo/Sean Kimmons

DOD and VA Release 2025 Lower Limb Amputation Cl...

Local News
Feb. 26, 2025

Clinicians working across the Military Health System who treat service members and veterans with lower limb...
Read More
Husband, wife and 2 daughters stand outside of two-story home. Text reads, "January is National Radon Action Month: This is the perfect time to think about testing your home for radon."

January Is National Radon Action Month: Learn To...

Local News
Jan. 07, 2025

The Environmental Protection Agency has designated January as National Radon Action Month, and the Centers for...
Read More
Female doctor examines patient with stethoscope

Patients Rank DHN Central Clinics, Providers ‘Be...

Local News
Dec. 19, 2024

Patients have ranked more than two dozen Defense Health Network Central clinics and providers as the “best of...
Read More
Auditorium full of uniformed service members.

Graduate Medical Education Selection Board Stren...

Local News
Dec. 10, 2024

More than 500 healthcare leaders from around the Military Health System worldwide conducted the annual Joint...
Read More
Three uniformed service members and four civilians in suits stand in front of projector screen.

Defense Health Agency’s Virtual Education Center...

Local News
Dec. 03, 2024

The Defense Health Agency’s Virtual Education Center, managed by the DHA Medical Simulation and Training...
Read More
DHN-NCR Enrollment Graphic

The Defense Health Network – National Capital Re...

Local News
Nov. 21, 2024

The Defense Health Network – National Capital Region is proud to announce the launch of the Defense Health...
Read More

April 11, 2025

Clinical Trials Center Seeks Volunteers for Staphylococcus Aureus Study

Staphylococcus aureus can impact readiness, and due to the antimicrobial resistance of the bacteria, keep warfighters away from the mission.

April 10, 2025

Reducing Impact of Upper Extremity Injuries With Early Diagnosis, Occupational Therapy

Service members experience 25 million limited duty days annually due to injuries, most of which are musculoskeletal injuries, also known as MSKI. Upper extremity injuries require unique recovery treatments that are most effective when tailored to an individual’s injury, as well as their specific work and personal activities. This treatment is provided by military Occupational Therapists Practitioners who are trained to treat service members’ upper extremity injuries from shoulders to fingertips.

Feb. 26, 2025

DOD and VA Release 2025 Lower Limb Amputation Clinical Practice Guidelines to Improve Patient Care

Clinicians working across the Military Health System who treat service members and veterans with lower limb loss now have access to the 2025 update to the Clinical Practice Guideline on the Rehabilitation of Individuals with Lower Limb Amputation.

Jan. 7, 2025

January Is National Radon Action Month: Learn To Manage Risk

The Environmental Protection Agency has designated January as National Radon Action Month, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has chosen the last week of January as Radon Awareness Week. This is the perfect time to think about testing your home for radon.

Dec. 19, 2024

Patients Rank DHN Central Clinics, Providers ‘Best of the Best’

Patients have ranked more than two dozen Defense Health Network Central clinics and providers as the “best of the best” in the Military Health System for patient experience and customer care, according to a recent Joint Outpatient Experience Survey quarterly report.

Dec. 10, 2024

Graduate Medical Education Selection Board Strengthens Military Medical Workforce

More than 500 healthcare leaders from around the Military Health System worldwide conducted the annual Joint Graduate Medical Education Selection Board at the Uniformed Services University from Nov. 18 to Nov. 22 to determine the future career paths of medical students and physicians applying for advanced training.

Dec. 3, 2024

Defense Health Agency’s Virtual Education Center Wins 2024 Digital Health Transformation Award

The Defense Health Agency’s Virtual Education Center, managed by the DHA Medical Simulation and Training Program Management Office, was awarded a 2024 GOVTECH CONNECTS Digital Health Transformation Award.

Nov. 21, 2024

Launch of New Model of Care and Enhanced TRICARE Prime Enrollment in the National Capital Region

The Defense Health Network – National Capital Region is proud to announce the launch of the Defense Health Agency’s innovative New Model of Care, starting with My Military Health Scheduled Virtual Visits. Alongside, we are also excited to reveal significant expansions in TRICARE Prime enrollment capacities across our facilities. The My Military Health care model ushers in a transformative era in healthcare delivery within the DHN-NCR. This groundbreaking approach is person-centric, utilizing cutting-edge digital tools to improve health outcomes and make healthcare more efficient and accessible.

Oct. 31, 2024

Section 508 Accessibility Empowers Patients To Manage Care

Defense Health Agency Section 508 digital accessibility and usability law update given by office program manager Ghoston.

Oct. 15, 2024

Medical Leaders Provide Update on DOD's Health Care Focus

All service members and their families deserve quality care, better access to treatment centers, health care providers and mental and physical well-being, the director of the Defense Health Agency said.