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Malaria diagnosis may be possible in two minutes without blood test

Africa:Experts of Uganda have made malaria and light-consuming malaria identification test that results in two minutes and does not require blood samples.

Currently, this test is undergoing the test stages and it has been awarded the Prince Award for Inter-Sceneship in Britain last week.

This system has been created by a Uganda engineer, Shafiq Sakito, who says that this system will provide the correct diagnosis of the disease like malaria to the local population. He has been awarded the Australian Award at St. James’s palace in London. Shafiq Sekito has named his technique as Matty Babu who diagnoses malaria very quickly. It is clear that 90% of malaria cases and deaths worldwide occur in Africa.

 Shafiq has developed a test with his 6 friends, including engineering, computer science, research and other fields, while experts and physicians (parasites) have also advised him.

Matte Babu has performed the role of a healthy and affected person’s blood, using light and magnetism.Remeding from the malaria test, it is known to be the malaculus made from parasites in Malaria. It uses a very polygon crystalline known polarized light. It removes parasites spreading crystal malaria.

In just two minutes, this system may cover malaria, which is still a four-fold fast system than any of the best and fastest tests. This included a device connected to a patient with a patient’s finger. In use it is like a plug and play device, like it and use it.

Philip Rathathel, a science professor researching malaria on this inventory, says although even the simple and fast malaria tests are in place, it does not even use a drop of blood which is a wonderful feature of it. In this way patients can also identify their malaria sitting at home.

Dr. Philip said this tragedy as a trick that said that it would be possible to diagnose malaria at the level of population rather than clinic, but this direction will have to be careful and gradually because one of the five in this malaria test Failed. Percentage of malaria cases are up to 20%. Philip says this worker needs to improve and improve by doing more work.

Shafiq felt this shortage and said that he would further improve the malaria test and he will spend every standard.