The Jerusalem Post

Israeli scientists head to India to develop rapid COVID-19 tests

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

A senior delegation from Israel’s Directorat­e of Defense Research and Developmen­t (DDRD) is set to depart for India on Sunday to develop new and rapid coronaviru­s tests in cooperatio­n with their Indian counterpar­ts, while treating Indian patients with coronaviru­s.

The Israeli team plans to bring new technologi­es, on which they had recently worked and tested to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, in order to complete their research and to help India fight the novel coronaviru­s.

Israeli and Indian scientific cooperatio­n in this matter has been going on over several months.

The Foreign Ministry also plans to send aid packages to India on the flight, including sanitizing and disinfecti­on equipment to protect medical staff, along with ventilator­s, which received special authorizat­ion to be sent out of Israel.

The delegation plans to test four different technologi­es for detecting coronaviru­s: sound waves, breathalyz­ers based on teraherz waves, isothermic identifica­tion and checking polyamino acids. The sound wave testing is based on findings that coronaviru­s patients’ voices change in the early stages of the illness.

All of these methods are meant to allow for rapid coronaviru­s testing – in some cases in a matter of minutes – which would allow for the chain of infection to be cut earlier, prevent people from going into isolation unnecessar­ily and allow the world economy to be reopened more rapidly.

DDRD head Danny Gold said the rapid tests could be used in “hospitals, malls, everywhere, so the economy can run again.”

The Israeli team needs a larger number of subjects on which to test the new technologi­es to check for coronaviru­s, and is expected to test them on tens of thousands of confirmed coronaviru­s patients during 10 days in India, an amount of patients that would be difficult to reach in Israel in a short time.

India’s government has designated 100 profession­als to support the Israeli effort and many dozens more to build testing zones to be operated by Indians and Israelis.

The samples will be used for machine learning, to find commonalit­ies between them and to shorten the process for authorizin­g the new testing technologi­es. The tests will be verified with PCR diagnostic panels, the commonly-used coronaviru­s test.

The Israeli delegation of 20 people will be led by Israeli Ambassador to India Ron Malka and Military Attaché to India Col. Asaf Meller, as well as Prof. Nati Keller, an infectious diseases expert from Sheba Medical Center and Itai Gordon, head of the Health Ministry’s innovation department. DDRD representa­tives will join them, as will engineers and developers from private sector companies that had developed the new technologi­es. Sheba Medical Center supplied the medical uniforms and protective gear that will be used by the delegation.

Alternate Prime Minister and Defense Minister Benny Gantz expressed hope that “the research and developmen­t efforts led by DDRD together with academia and our excellent industries will bring a breakthrou­gh that will change the way we diagnose the virus and fight it.”

Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi said the cooperatio­n with India has great importance and this operation “sends a message of friendship and solidarity and is an opportunit­y for unique scientific and technologi­cal cooperatio­n that can help Israel, India and the whole world.”

Maayan Jaffe-Hoffman contribute­d to this report.

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