| It is. I'm afraid I'll have to side with the cynics until further info is give on it's principles of operation. The Plasmodium parasite doesn't seem to have any special characteristics (ie size, spectral response) that would make it detectable by such a device. You can skip the sample size issue by assuming the diagnostic will run for hours or days, but I don't see any theoretical foundation this device could be based on. Also the obsession of the website with the smartphone interface is kind of sketchy and makes it look (more) like a scam to me. Edit: I looked further into it, the price is given by the royal academy of engineering. Taken from their website [1]: " Gitta wins the first prize of UK £25,000 (124 million Ugandan shillings). At an awards ceremony in Nairobi, Kenya on 13 June 2018, four finalists from across sub-Saharan Africa delivered presentations, before Africa Prize judges and a live audience voted for the most promising engineering innovation." Which means that a live audience of non-technical people were involved in the choice, and, to my opinion, from the rest of the content, this is a feel-good kind of competition with soft goals like promoting innovation and training young people, not the kind of competition that awards working ideas. [1] https://www.raeng.org.uk/news/news-releases/2018/june/uganda... |
Its red beam can detect changes in the colour, shape and concentration of red blood cells - all of which are affected by malaria.
So that particular line of cynicism is more illiterate than it is cynical.