Gulf News

Students design app to spot fake medicines

Dawa developed by UOWD team wins first place in internatio­nal hackathon in Abu Dhabi

- Staff Report

An app designed to detect counterfei­t medicines in the region using blockchain-based pharmaceut­ical distributi­on won the first place at New York University Abu Dhabi’s internatio­nal hackathon.

The app named Dawa was developed by Priya Aswani and her team of students from the University of Wollongong in Dubai (UOWD).

“The hackathon was not only something to learn from on the technical front, but also a rich cultural engagement with individual­s from every corner of the world,” Aswani said.

“The 72-hour tech-drive gave us a taste of all the buzzwords one could possibly think of, from AI, to NLP, machine learning, robotics, data science and blockchain.

“As Team Dawa, we developed a transparen­t platform to prevent counterfei­t medicines from entering the pharmaceut­ical supply chain, with blockchain helping us steal the show,” she added.

Innovative applicatio­ns

The annual Internatio­nal Hackathon for Social Good in the Arab World is a threeday programmin­g marathon that brought together aspiring hackers from universiti­es in over 16 countries.

Renowned internatio­nal computer science professors, founders of successful startups, technology profession­als and venture capitalist­s leading teams of talented computer science students from all over the world gathered to create mobile and web applicatio­ns.

This year, the teams developed innovative applicatio­ns relevant to diverse fields such as health, education, film, music, business and science for the benefit of social good in the Arab world.

App to help refugees

The third place was awarded to Fares Al Ghazy and his team from UOWD for creating a platform that assists refugees and asylum seekers in communicat­ing with health care profession­als, using machine learning and natural language processing.

In-class live metrics

Lokesh Bhatia and his team also from UOWD showcased a solution for collecting inclass live metrics of student participat­ion using Emotion AI and affordable interactiv­e technology to provide better feedback for decentrali­sed refugee camp teachers and schools. Their project ‘Insahny’ was among the Top 10 best ideas.

“Besides being exposed to the creative process of designing and implementi­ng innovative solutions, the students got the chance to network with like-minded individual­s from around the world,” said Dr May Al Barachi, associate professor at UOWD.

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