So there's another company profiting off the deaths and sickness of millions of the poorest people in the world.
Watch this Vlogbrothers video to learn about it:
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So there's another company profiting off the deaths and sickness of millions of the poorest people in the world.
Watch this Vlogbrothers video to learn about it:
GeneXpert incrível aparelho que realiza Rtpcr para covid19 em 3 horas com hipersensibilidade ao teste ...@labnucleo @heloisanucleolaboratorio @syrion1 sempre oferecendo o melhor da tecnologia em prol dos seus pacientes. #covid_19 #covid19 #rtpcr #genexpert (em Laboratório Núcleo) https://www.instagram.com/p/CCdgxDlJB-a/?igshid=ntz9kk4advg2
#новости | Экспресс-тест GeneXpert может диагностировать инфекцию COVID-19 меньше чем за час
#новости | Экспресс-тест GeneXpert может диагностировать инфекцию COVID-19 меньше чем за час
Метод GeneXpert, который взяли на вооружение грузинские медики, разработан в США и используется для выявления туберкулеза и гепатита
ТБИЛИСИ, 30 апр — Грузия онлайн. Диагностировать коронавирус с помощью устройства “Джинэксперт” (GeneXpert) можно будет за 50 минут, об этом журналистам рассказала старший врач-лаборант тбилисской Первой университетской клиники Хатия Микаберидзе.
Республиканская…
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Kano records over 7,000 TB cases in 2017
Kano records over 7,000 TB cases in 2017
The Kano state Commissioner for Health, Dr. Kabiru Getso said on Monday that the state recorded over 7,000 cases of Tuberclosis (TB) with 21 deaths in 2017.
He revealed at a Press conference to mark the World Tuberclosis Day in Kano that the state government had every plan to reduce TB burden in line with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
“With the support of development partners, the…
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Turo pose... #GeneXpert #PMDTLife #PMDT #janus2016🤗 (at Department of Health Regional Office 2)
Processing... #GeneXpert #PMDTLife #PMDT #janus2016🤗 (at Department of Health Regional Office 2)
THE BIG FIX FOR TB Although tuberculosis stubbornly remains the second deadliest infectious disease on the planet, there was a feeling in the health care industry that curing it simply wasn’t profitable enough. “The word on the street was that TB was a disease of the poor and there wasn’t enough money in it,” one expert told Pulitzer Center grantee Jens Erik Gould. But as Jens reports in this piece for The New York Times Fixes blog, things began to change in 2010 when the California-based diagnostics company Cepheid Inc unveiled GeneXpert, which uses automated molecular technology to quickly detect the presence of TB—the first real breakthrough in early detection of TB in nearly a century. “The problem is that not everyone has access to it. Not long after the rollout, health care workers began realizing that GeneXpert wasn’t designed for the people who needed it most: the poor in the developing world. Even though donors were mostly paying for the $17,000 machines, the $10 cartridges were too pricey for many countries to afford on a mass scale. The setup also required electricity, computer access and refrigeration—not easy to come by in rural areas where TB is prevalent.” But ironically, those shortcomings have spurred new interest in tuberculosis care. “The overwhelming excitement about GeneXpert among health officials and the substantial investments made by donors quelled doubts that there was demand for new TB technology and that it could be profitable,” writes Jens. “As a result, more companies have entered the TB market and are competing to develop diagnostic technologies that would provide the benefits of GeneXpert, without the drawbacks. The lesson? Often, it’s the drawbacks, even more than the benefits, which can spur a paradigm shift.” SAVING THE YAZIDIS The plight of Iraq’s ethnic Yazidi community after the rise of the Islamic State last summer is a litany of misery: forced conversions, executions and the sexual enslavement of women and children. Pulitzer Center grantee Emily Feldman has been following the crisis from the beginning. Although the Yazidis were singled out for special torment, Emily reports that no one seems spared from the chaos. “Muslims, Christians and minorities in the jihadists's path have either been slaughtered or forced from their homes. Villages, towns and cities across the country are now deserted,” she writes in a recent series of dispatches for Mashable. “Activists and NGOs, meanwhile, are scattered throughout the region, attempting to organize the madness of war in handwritten lists and excel spreadsheets. They are checking in on people, going door-to-door,” says Emily, who also spoke to the BBC about what she witnessed. “Thousands, though, are still missing. And though exact numbers are hard to come by in this war-torn region, activists believe as many as 3,000 Yazidis may still be held in ISIS slavery.” HOLY WARS The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia stakes its legitimacy on the austerity with which it enforces Sharia law. The militant Islamic State (IS) follows the same logic. It may seem strange that the two have become mortal enemies, but as Pulitzer Center grantee Elizabeth Dickinson explains, the competition between the Saudis and IS is one reason their conflict stands to be so fierce. “Over the last eight months, Saudi Arabia has arrested 1,059 men with alleged ties to terrorist groups, including local cells of the so-called Islamic State (IS). The sweep followed a string of attacks attributed to IS, the most deadly of which have targeted Saudi Arabia’s Shia communities,” she writes in her two-part series for GlobalPost. “For now, authorities say IS and its imitators are more nuisance than significant threat to the country’s security. But with each attack, it becomes more difficult to write off the violence as isolated.” The biggest headache for the Saudis, says Elizabeth, is keeping their own citizens from joining IS. “Nearly all of the suspects named in the recent assaults have been Saudi citizens or residents.”
Until next week, Tom Hundley Senior Editor