ルオル・デンのインスタグラム(luoldeng9) - 6月20日 03時06分


[repost] @sinistar22x2: Ugandan inventor has won a major prize for a device which tests for malaria without drawing blood. Brian Gitta, 24, won the Royal Academy of Engineering's Africa Prize for a device that detects tell-tale signs of malaria by shining a red beam of light on the patient's finger.
When a person is infected, the malaria parasite takes over a vacuole of the red blood cells and significantly remodels it. 
The diagnosis is ready to be shared to a mobile phone in a minute. He developed the device, called Matibabu, after blood tests failed to diagnose his own malaria.
.
.
Matibabu (Swahili for ‘treatment’) is low cost, reusable and because the procedure is non-invasive, does not require specialist training.The majority of global deaths caused by malaria usually transmitted by the bite of an infected Anopheles mosquito occur in sub-Saharan Africa. Mr Gitta has also been awarded £25,000 ($33,000) in prize money from the Royal Academy of Engineering. His team hopes the device can one day be used as a way to better detect malaria across the continent.


[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield)

>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する

1,152

39

2018/6/20

ケビン・デュラントのインスタグラム
ケビン・デュラントさんがフォロー

ルオル・デンを見た方におすすめの有名人