The Transportation, Homeland Security and Health and Human Services departments recently released interagency guidance on temperature checks as part of the government’s Runway to Recovery framework. The document is designed to help airlines and airports mitigate the public health risks of COVID-19.
“While temperature screening has limited reliability in detecting individuals with COVID-19, it may detect some noticeably sick passengers,” states the guidance. “Airlines and airports may need to consider the use of temperature screening to meet destination requirements or requirements of local health authorities.”
Battlefield Tech Is Adapted for the Homefront
The idea to adapt IVAS for medical screening came when Tom Bowman, director of the IVAS Science and Technology Special Project Office within the C5ISR’s Night Vision Laboratory at Fort Belvoir, Va., was watching news reports about COVID-19 this spring, and thought the project’s digital thermal sensors could be adapted to detect fever.
The technology initially was tested at Fort Benning, where thousands of soldiers have been screened using the system, Siter says. The system is being used to rapidly assess the temperature of hundreds of soldiers each day as they prepare for training.
IVAS will still be used in combat to detect targets, improve soldiers’ situational awareness and make training possible during pandemic lockdowns.
“It’s first and foremost a fighting system,” Siter says. “But it will also be used to rehearse combat operations and to train soldiers.”