The protective equipment was donated by Yale alum Frank Ji, Yale College ’09, who purchased thousands of pieces of certified PPE in Shanghai with the intention of donating it to the Yale New Haven Health system. It was a tremendously generous gesture by Ji, but he needed help getting the supplies to New Haven.
The process wasn’t easy. The Yale volunteers had to navigate numerous international shipping regulations, trade restrictions and other legal requirements. Complicating matters further – Lin was sidelined temporarily when he contracted COVID-19 during the middle of the project.
“On the public health side, it really reinforces the idea that everything is connected to everything,” Yajnik said of the experience. “When you’re thinking about public health challenges and getting shipments to people in need, you have to think about the policy side and the regulatory side, and you have to communicate with a lot of different people really effectively.”
The littlest details became big problems.
“We would vet a certain type of mask, procure the lot, and have them shipped to port, just to be told that the masks could not be exported any more for something as simple as the placement of the certificate of inspection on the boxes,” Miller said. “Changes in regulations resulted in long nights. We had to manually move certificates of inspection from the boxes into plastic bags for thousands of masks.”
Now that they know the ins and outs of the international shipping process, the volunteers have started a GoFundMe page to solicit more donations for PPE. New donations will be used to acquire PPE for other hospitals in the region as well as nursing homes and similar facilities caring for vulnerable populations, the team said.
For now, while they wait for new contributions (the GoFundMe page just went live), the trio has a great story to tell and, like so many other stories these days, theirs starts on social media.
In early spring, Frank Ji, an active member of the Yale undergrad alumni community, reached out to Miller on the popular Chinese social messaging app WeChat. Ji expressed his interest in donating PPE to Yale New Haven Hospital but he wasn’t sure what supplies were needed most. Miller, also an active member of Yale undergrad alumni community, works in Shanghai and has a background in international trade and logistics.
About the same time, Yajnik and other members of the Yale Coalition for Health Innovation in Medical Emergencies or CHIME were engaging in various projects to help frontline workers in New Haven during the COVID crisis. Miller is a former student of CHIME leader Joseph Zinter, assistant director of the Yale Center of Engineering Innovation and Design or CEID. She contacted him about Ji’s donation.
Zinter shared the news with Yajnik, who contacted Miller on WeChat and together the pair started putting things into action. Soon after, Lin, who had been working on his own to arrange PPE donations through New Haven’s Asian American and Yale communities, learned of the pending donation through WeChat and offered to help.
With Miller and Ji in Shanghai and Yajnik in her hometown of Dallas due to COVID restrictions at Yale, Lin became a critical connection for coordinating the actual delivery and receiving of the PPE at Yale New Haven Hospital.