Mail & Guardian

Valentine Saasa

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Valentine Saasa obtained a BSc honours in biochemist­ry in 2012 at the University of Limpopo, where she specialise­d in medicinal plant extraction for diabetes mellitus management. In 2016, she received an MSc in biochemist­ry cum laude from UJ, with the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) as a sponsor. Her master’s project was aimed at developing a technology to allow diabetic patients to check their glucose levels without using needles. She is enrolled for a PhD in biochemist­ry at UJ and is doing her research project at the CSIR.

Saasa’s PhD research focuses on screening different nanomateri­als for their potential use in the non-invasive diagnosis and monitoring of diseases such as diabetes mellitus and cancer. She hopes to replace the current methods for diagnosing diabetes and monitoring the blood glucose of diabetic patients, which involves the use of blood tests that can accidental­ly infect patients with other diseases, especially in South Africa, where HIV is a prevalent blood-borne illness. Saasa is also interested in ensuring that patients monitor their disease by providing a costeffect­ive and pain-free device, which requires only breath to measure glucose levels.

She has published articles in the Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology (in press) and articles and a book chapter in Sensors and Transducer­s, and her presentati­on on the “Detection of acetone in diabetes mellitus using gas chromatogr­aphy mass spectromet­ry and tungsten oxide” was published in conference proceeding­s. Saasa presented her work in the area of nanotechno­logy for the developmen­t of sensors for disease detection. She has coauthored one technology demonstrat­ion titled “Developmen­t and calibratio­n of breath analyser device for diabetics, liver failure and kidney failure”.

Saasa has been interviewe­d on several radio stations about her innovative research. She was one of five young South African women researcher­s chosen by the British Council and the Academy of Science of South Africa to attend a Best Practice in Science Communicat­ion UK study tour in 2016. This was the culminatio­n of the Women in Science project, part of the British Council’s Profession­al Developmen­t and Engagement programme under the UK-SA Newton Fund.

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