Pneumonia is the number 1 killer of children worldwide with 2 million deaths each year. With a child dying every 20 seconds, pneumonia is a significant contributor to neonatal mortality in developing countries – more than AIDS, malaria and measles combined. The illness is treatable and preventable, but accurate early detection is key. To reduce child mortality due to Acute Respiratory Infection (ARI), the Smart Object Sensing Array invented by Guardit and licensed by Inspire Living Inc., contracted with the global NGO Project HOPE to create a device to aid in the efficient detection of tachypnea, an indication of pneumonia in children, based on Libelium’s e-Health Sensor Platform.
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Scooped by
Judy Curtis / SIPR
onto Smart Cities & The Internet of Things (IoT) February 18, 2014 12:58 PM
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The Internet of Things, through low-cost sensors and prototyping tools, has an important role to play in public health. A new sensor device to monitor infant breath rate in the third world — and to better diagnose and treat pneumonia-- is featured on Libelium's website.
The name of the device -- INSPIRE (inspirer, in French, also means "breathe in")-- is very appropriate for this sensor system currently in field trials. The inventor Michael Script (co-founder of Inspired Living, Inc.) describes the process and steps involved from idea to prototype to actual device.
The availability of low-cost sensors, from Libelium's eHealth sensor platform, contributed to this project.
http://www.libelium.com/e-health-low-cost-sensors-for-early-detection-of-childhood-disease-inspire-project-hope