Children and the elderly are especially vulnerable to pneumonia. According to Unicef, pneumonia accounts for almost one million deaths of children worldwide every year. In Uganda, Unicef estimates the disease kills up to 24,000 children under five every year, many of whom were misdiagnosed with malaria.

In 2014, Ms Olivia Koburongo, an engineering graduate from Makerere University, and four others came up with Mama-Ope (Mother’s Hope), a biomedical smart jacket that detects and analyses pneumonia symptoms in children.

Currently in prototype, the jacket is worn by the child, and its sensors pick up sound patterns from the lungs, temperature and breathing rate. In four minutes, data is computed and sent to a mobile phone application which then gives a diagnosis.

The team is seeking certification for its award-winning innovation from Uganda’s Ministry of Health.

According to studies carried out by its inventors, the jacket can diagnose pneumonia up to three times faster than a doctor can, and reduces human error.

After displaying the result, the app goes on to advise on the appropriate action.

The beauty of the innovation is that doctors can gauge the severity of the disease from the point it was first diagnosed by using the information stored in the cloud.

Read more here.

 

Source: The Straits Times, 24 June 2017