| Arthur Zang with his invention. |
He is just 28 years old, but Cameroonian Arthur Zang has won a £25,000 ($37,000) prize for inventing a touchscreen heart-monitoring tablet that could revolutionize medicine in remote areas.
Cardio Pad enables heart patients in remote areas to access healthcare without journeying to the cities where most heart specialists work.
Zang -- who won gold at the Africa Prize
for the invention -- explains that the tablet comes with "four
electrodes, which are attached to the patient's chest to determine
whether their heart is functioning normally".
The
data is then wirelessly transmitted to the tablet and sent, via a
mobile phone, to a cardiologist who can interpret the data in under 20
minutes.
Any prescriptions needed are then sent to the local clinic.
Matters of the heart
Cameroon is home to over 22 million people, but fewer than 50 cardiologists.
Almost all the heart specialists reside in the big cities of Yaounde and Douala.
"The Cardio Pad
solves this problem by connecting rural patients suffering from heart
diseases without the the means, time, contacts and even the strength to
travel to the city with the few, city-based cardiologists we have," says
Cameroon's public health minister, André Mama Fouda.
The device could be a solution to heart patients across Sub-Saharan Africa - where nearly one in two people over the age of 25 has hypertension, and an estimated 20 million Africans suffer from a cardiovascular disease. A further 80 million Africans are estimated to have abnormally high blood pressure, which can lead to heart failure.
Zang says he has sold hundreds of Cardio Pads in Cameroon, Gabon, India and Nepal.
Inspiration
Zang's
invention is personal. He lost his uncle to a cardiovascular disease,
and grew up in a remote village where he witnessed the daily anguish of
people lacking healthcare.
"It is that continuous search for a
solution that let me to develop the Cardio Pad as a school project, and
ultimately I grew it to provide solutions to heart patients based in
remote areas," Zang says.
Recognition
from the Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation couldn't have come at a
better time -- Zang has another business idea in the works: a "smart
card" company.
"It's like the ATM
card. It can be used to open doors automatically and we think government
offices, schools and banks will find the smart card a great opportunity
to secure the doors to their premises," he says.
-CNN

No comments:
Post a Comment