不正确地查看这个页面吗?明确你的浏览r cache!

Health

April 20, 2023

Makerere Collaboration: 25 Products and Prototypes Cataloged for E4C’s Solutions Library

contributor:Rob Goodier

Illuminate Dermoscopewound screener,Tampostatlow-cost post-partum hemorrhage treatment,Saansneonatal breathing disorder treatment, and more than 20 other technologies have been assessed for inclusion in Engineering for Change’s Solutions Library. The work stems from a collaboration with the Biomedical Engineering department at Makerere University in Kampala Uganda.

Learn more about the Solutions Library

The Solutions Library is a living database of technologies that meet basic needs in the world’s underserved communities. The library contains thousands of products and services, each detailed in a standardized format that includes interviews, research findings and other evidence for their efficacy. Standardization of each entry allows for easy, side-by-side comparisons between similar products, supporting practitioners as they decide among their options for technologies to meet their goals.

We got to contribute to a notable cause that could come a long way in improving the development status of resource-constrained communities like mine. – Racheal Nalwoga, biodmedical engineer, Makerere University

Six Makerere students joined E4C’s Fellowship Program in 2022 to conduct a deep update of the Health sector of our Solutions Library. The fellows added 25 new technologies to the Solutions Library, revised 12 existing entries and restructured the Health sector, expanding six technology categories. The result is a more relevant, better organized selection of health technologies.

Now 15 of the 25 technologies our fellows from Makerere Biomedical Engineering assessed are published or pending publication.

They includeReli,illuminate Dermoscope,Tampostat,Saans,DMPA-SC, BrailleMe,3rd Stone Cold Storage,Soloshot,ePartogram,Keyar,OralScan,HeatMarker VVM,miniPIERS,Saarthi, andbreastIT.

开云体育手机登陆平台

This pilot collaboration proved the idea has merit, was successful and could be carried out again to even greater success, says Dr. Robert Ssekitoleko, head of Biomedical Engineering at Makerere University.

Surveys suggest the fellows were inspired by the work.

“I loved the fact that we got to contribute to such a notable cause that could come a long way in improving the development status of resource-constrained communities like mine (Uganda),” Racheal Nalwoga, a biomedical engineer at Makerere and former E4C Fellow, told E4C.

Some technologies assessed are still prototypes, such as Kriya, a personal care product monitors pregnancy and alerts mothers to anomalies it detects.

“We hope that when funders find such devices they could assist in their promotion and advancement,” Ms. Nalwoga says.

Once published, the product entries may prompt innovators to develop similar or improved technologies to solve healthcare challenges in different settings, Ms. Nalwoga says.

Learn more about E4C’s Fellowship Program

tags :Fellowship,healthcare technologies,Makerere University,solutions library

Rob Goodier

Leave a Comment

Sign Into comment.

    by engineers.
    for everyone.

    E4C Membership is a curated experience! When you become a member, we will tailor a unique user profile for you based on the way you engage with our content over time. Your actions and preferences will allow us to serve you content that is most relevant to you. In addition, becoming an E4C member grants you access to exclusive engagement opportunities and the E4C newsletter.

    Join E4C and become a part of a global community that believes engineering can change the world!

    Become a Member
    Baidu
    map