MakeShift: Outbreak
Read this article in MAKE:
15: Music, Page 30.
To get MAKE, subscribe or purchase single volumes.
The creator of MacGyver challenges you to use your skills to manage an outbreak on a passenger plane.
From the column MakeShift
Photos by Jen Siska
The Scenario:
Imagine youre a world-renowned epidemiologist (yeah, we know its a stretch, but just roll with it). Youre on your way back home to Northern California from a pandemics conference in Tokyo, with your 5-year-old child and significant other, cruising over the Pacific at 37,000 feet, and at least six more hours from home or any airport, for that matter.
Youve had your second meal and watched the movie, and youre dozing peacefully in your business class seat when your child wakes you to say he really needs to use the bathroom. So you get up to escort him to the nearest lav, only to run into the longest lines of passengers youve ever seen waiting to get to all of the planes restrooms, from first class to coach.
An anxious flight attendant tries to push past you carrying numerous loaded barf bags as you stop her to ask whats going on. Trying to remain calm, she says that, unless youre a doctor, could you please return to your seat. Well, as fate would have it .
The Challenge:
Clearly theres an outbreak of unknown origin spreading through the plane, and the sense of panic is starting to build among the passengers and flight crew. Given your credentials, you might be the only person that everyone, including the captain, will listen to. So, putting aside all your years of medical school and practice for the moment since a snap diagnosis might do as much harm as good what are you going to do to manage the crisis?
What You Have:
In addition to the airliners basic emergency medical supplies, you have whatever any of the passengers might be carrying on a commercial aircraft capable of trans- oceanic flight. And, for the purposes of this challenge, you can assume the flight crew and passengers will follow your instructions without argument, be they very old, very young, or anyone who had significant health issues prior to boarding the plane. So what now, Doc?
~~~
Send a detailed description of your MakeShift solution with sketches and/or photos to makeshift@makezine.com by Nov. 21, 2008. If duplicate solutions are submitted, the winner will be determined by the quality of the explanation and presentation. The most plausible and most creative solutions will each win a MAKE T-shirt and a MAKE Pocket Reference. Think positive and include your shirt size and contact information with your solution. Good luck! For readers solutions to previous MakeShift challenges, visit makezine.com/makeshift.
And the next MakeShift challenge could be yours! Thats right, were throwing open the doors and offering you the chance to create your own MakeShift to challenge the world. Just submit an original scenario in the familiar format the challenge, what you have, etc. with some ideas of how you think it should be solved. The winning scenario will not only be published right here but also earn you a $50 gift certificate for the Maker Shed. The deadline is Nov. 21, 2008, so get out there and start looking for trouble!
Extras
Additional content for this article, available only online.
MakeShift 15: Analysis, Commentary, and Winners
by Lee D. Zlotoff;
December 17, 2008 | Technorati | del.icio.us
MakeShift 15: Dr. Robert Baker's Most Plausible Winning Entry
Dr. Robert Baker's entry was awarded the MakeShift Master Plausible award for his solution to MakeShift 15.
by Lee D. Zlotoff;
December 17, 2008 | Technorati | del.icio.us
MakeShift 15: Nate Gatfield's Most Creative Winning Entry
Nate Gatfield's entry was awarded the MakeShift Master Creative award for his solution to MakeShift 15.
by Lee D. Zlotoff;
December 17, 2008 | Technorati | del.icio.us
MAKE: Noise — Discuss this article
You must be logged in to post a talkback.Join the conversation -- every MAKE article has an online page that includes a place for discussion. We've made these RSS and Atom feeds to help you watch the discussions: subscribe.
Explore More in Make Magazine
Search the pages of MAKE
Raves for MAKE!
“Now we've got geek DIY (do it yourself) porn. Just as would-be Emerils pore over lushly illustrated cookbooks with recipes involving hard-to-find morels and complicated instructions for roux, Tom Swift wanna-bes are devouring MAKE.”
— Steven Levy, Newsweek
“...O'Reilly Media recently launched what has already become the bible of this new movement, a magazine called MAKE.”
— Daniel Roth, FORTUNE
“If you're the type who views the warnings not to pry open your computer as more a challenge than admonition, MAKE is for you.”
— Rolling Stone
“One of the most innovative magazines I've seen in a long time.”
— Steve Riggio, CEO Barnes & Noble
“The kind of magazine that would impress MacGyver”
— Marcus Chan, San Francisco Chronicle





