Today’s Solutions: April 19, 2026

Masks and gowns are crucial to protect health workers from the spread of viruses, but they only do so much. Germs can still latch onto the material that protective equipment is made of, and diseases can spread when people touch the masks or touch their gowns.

What if, like water sliding off a raincoat, viruses could be repelled by the textiles used for PPE, clothing and even the seats in a hospital waiting room?

University of Pittsburgh researchers have created a washable textile coating that repels liquids, such as blood and saliva, and also prevents viruses from adhering to its surface. Their work, which was recently published in the journal ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, began before the COVID-19 pandemic, but the researchers see it as being especially relevant now.

Not only could this coating potentially improve how protective PPE is, says Paul Leu, coauthor of the research and head of the school’s Laboratory for Advanced Materials—it could also help address critical PPE shortages, such as what hospitals across the world are currently facing. “One of the main reasons [for shortages] is because a lot of medical textiles are disposable. They’re single-use—you use it once, then throw it away.”

That’s also a huge benefit to the environment as less single-use PPE means less waste. Considering the revolutionary potential this could have for PPE, we’ll certainly be watching the development of this washable textile from the University of Pittsburgh.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Eat this amount of fruit daily to significantly lower diabetes risk

As you may already know, fruit is an excellent source of essential vitamins and minerals. A recent study, however, shows that just the right ...

Read More

A seat at the table for underrepresented communities

Climate change is already affecting all of us—however, those that bear the brunt of these consequences are predominantly from low-income, marginalized, BIPOC communities. So ...

Read More

Suffer from chronic lower back pain? New single shot treatment could be for you

Degenerative disk disease affects around 40 percent of the population over the age of 40, and those who live with the agony of the ...

Read More

Women in New Mexico make history with legislative majority

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM With 60 of the 112 seats in the state legislature, New Mexico women have set a new benchmark ...

Read More