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Engineering the Next Gen Band-Aid

An approach using nanotech to improve wound healing and antibacterial properties

Akash Patel
10 min readFeb 5, 2021

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It’s the 1920s, Johnson and Johnson is well established for their production of large, cotton gauze dressings that are sterile and sealed against germs — a first of its kind. An employee by the name of Earle Dickson is recently married to a young, rather accident-prone woman. Her domestic cuts and burns are too minor for the company’s large surgical dressings, so Earle, in a moment of vision, cuts a small square of the sterile gauze (the white part of the band-aid) and secures it to her finger with an adhesive strip.

Earle is forced to make so many of these bandages for his clumsy wife, he devises a method for a small production of them. In order to keep the adhesive part from sticking together, he lines them with a crinoline fabric (the brown part of the band-aid), and soon Johnson and Johnson beings production of Earle’s invention. In a brilliant marketing move, they distribute, for free, an unlimited number of band-aids to all the Boy Scout Troops across America. It doesn’t take long for them to become a household item. It is estimated that Johnson and Johnson has since made more than a 100 million band-aids.

These small bandages have become a staple in every household, as it is the go to item for…

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Akash Patel
Akash Patel

Written by Akash Patel

Innovator | Thinker | Creator. Passionate about medicine and its nanotechnological implications. Working on executing an idea. Website: akashapatel.com

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