Anti-malaria wristwatch developed

Anti-malaria wristwatch developed

JOHANNESBURG – A South African inventor has developed an anti-malaria wristwatch to help combat one of Africa’s biggest killers by monitoring the blood of those who wear it and sounding an alarm when the parasite is detected.

Gervan Lubbe said his ‘Malaria Monitor’ wristwatch, due to launch next month, could save lives and keep millions out of hospital by heading off the disease before patients even feel ill. “It picks up the parasite and destroys it so early that the possibility of dying is absolutely zero and you don’t even feel the early cold symptoms,” Lubbe told Reuters in a telephone interview this week.Malaria, caused by a parasite carried by mosquitoes, kills more than a million people every year and makes 300 million seriously ill, according to the World Health Organisation.Ninety per cent of deaths are in sub-Saharan Africa.The sturdy digital timepiece pricks the wrist with a tiny needle four times a day and tests the blood for malaria parasites.If the parasite count tops 50, an alarm sounds and a brightly coloured picture of a mosquito flashes on the watch face.The wearer must take three tablets that kill all traces of the disease within 48 hours.Lubbe was approached by a major mining company to develop the device after it found high levels of malaria among workers in Africa was hurting productivity.His company Gervans Trading has already received 1,5 million orders for the wristwatch from companies, governments and aid organisation working in Africa, he said.The watch will cost around 1 700 rand .- Nampa-Reuters”It picks up the parasite and destroys it so early that the possibility of dying is absolutely zero and you don’t even feel the early cold symptoms,” Lubbe told Reuters in a telephone interview this week.Malaria, caused by a parasite carried by mosquitoes, kills more than a million people every year and makes 300 million seriously ill, according to the World Health Organisation.Ninety per cent of deaths are in sub-Saharan Africa.The sturdy digital timepiece pricks the wrist with a tiny needle four times a day and tests the blood for malaria parasites.If the parasite count tops 50, an alarm sounds and a brightly coloured picture of a mosquito flashes on the watch face.The wearer must take three tablets that kill all traces of the disease within 48 hours.Lubbe was approached by a major mining company to develop the device after it found high levels of malaria among workers in Africa was hurting productivity.His company Gervans Trading has already received 1,5 million orders for the wristwatch from companies, governments and aid organisation working in Africa, he said.The watch will cost around 1 700 rand .- Nampa-Reuters

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