We just received some exciting news about a UW Change and PATH
collaboration which has received Gates Foundation funding.

According to PATH.org, "PATH will lead a new research project to
develop a low-cost, cell phone?based system for human milk banks to
monitor the safety of donated breast milk, supported by a $100,000
grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation?s Grand Challenges
Explorations initiative.

The system combines the power of cell phone technology with the
simplicity of a low-tech flash-heating pasteurization process to
ensure that breast milk donated to feed vulnerable infants is free of
bacteria and viruses, including HIV, while retaining its nutritional
value.

The 12-month grant was made to a multidisciplinary team that includes
PATH and two partner organizations?the Department of Computer Science
and Engineering at the University of Washington and the Human Milk
Banking Association of South Africa.

The team will develop and field-test a networked temperature sensing
system using FoneAstra
(http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/rohitc/foneastra.htm), a cell
phone technology, to accurately monitor and validate temperatures
during flash-heating. It will provide real-time, audiovisual feedback
to users, allow automated supervisor monitoring, and archive results
for review and audit.

Flash-heating is a simple, effective way to pasteurize breast milk
that is more affordable for human milk banks in low-resource settings
than standard commercial-grade pasteurization. The total cost for the
monitoring system will be less than US$100, compared to
commercial-grade pasteurizers, which cost up to $12,000".

Read more at http://www.path.org/news/an111107-infant-nutrition.php
and congratulations to Rohit Chaudhri and the entire FoneAstra team!

Reply via email to