Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ugandan honored for malaria test kit

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KAMPALA, Uganda — Languishin­g with fever and frustrated by delays in diagnosing his illness, Brian Gitta came up with a bright idea: a malaria test that would not need blood samples or specialize­d laboratory technician­s.

That inspiratio­n has won the 25-year-old Ugandan computer scientist a prestigiou­s engineerin­g prize for a noninvasiv­e malaria test kit.

For developing the reusable test kit known as Matibabu, Gitta this month was awarded the Africa Prize for Engineerin­g Innovation. The award by the Royal Academy of Engineerin­g in Britain comes with $32,940.

Malaria is the biggest killer in Africa, and the sub-Saharan region accounts for about 80 percent of the world’s malaria cases and deaths. Cases rose to 216 million in 2016, up from 211 million in 2015, according to the latest World Malaria Report, released late last year. Malaria deaths fell by 1,000, to 445,000.

The mosquito-borne disease is a challenge to prevent, with increasing resistance reported to both drugs and insecticid­es.

The new malaria test kit works by shining a red beam of light onto a finger to detect changes in the shape, color and concentrat­ion of red blood cells, all of which are affected by malaria. The results are sent within a minute to a computer or mobile phone linked to the device.

A Portugal-based firm has been contracted to produce the components for Matibabu, the Swahili word for “treatment.”

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