Everything Nurses >> Nursing Politics/Activism >> I 17-Year-Old Invents a Cellphone That Offers Cardiac Care to Patients

Rate

I 17-Year-Old Invents a Cellphone That Offers Cardiac Care to Patients

253 Views
2 Replies Flag as inappropriate
Me_in_cocceticut_max50

26676 posts

back to top

Posted 9 months ago

 

      

17-Year-Old Invents a Cellphone That Offers Cardiac Care to Patients

 

 

Catherine Wong might appear to be an ordinary high school student from Morristown, N.J., but in reality, she may have just revolutionized cardiac care in developing countries, according to NPR. The site reports that Wong invented a cellphone that also operates as a portable electrocardiogram machine; the device is able to measure a user’s heart activity and then in real-time, transmit that information to a doctor located anywhere in the world.

 

Wong not only came up with the idea, but she built a workable prototype out of basic cellphone materials anyone could purchase at Radio Shack. She submitted her invention to NPR’s "Joe’s Big Idea Contest", and this week was announced as its winner.

 

 

 

An electrocardiogram (ECG) is a widely-used medical test to track heart rhythms in cardiac patients. Using Bluetooth wireless signals, Wong’s cellphone picks up the user’s heart rhythm. Then, courtesy of a Java app Wong wrote herself, the rhythms appear illustrated on the phone's screen. Those results can then be transmitted in real-time to a diagnosing doctor, even when the patient is in a remote location.

 

The 17-year-old, who’s currently in her junior year of high school, explained that she was inspired to make low-cost medical tools for the developing world. NPR states that there are “2 billion people in the world with no access to healthcare” and tools like Wong’s cellphone bring crucial medical attention to people who otherwise would never have come in contact with it.

 


 

 


Wong may have already started her school year, but she’s continuing to fine-tune her invention. With the help of mentors she's come in contact with since winning the contest, she hopes to make her device smaller, less expensive, and durable so that it can become a more immediate reality for people in developing countries. She told NPR, "That's who I aimed the project at, and that's who I'm working for."

 


 


 

 

Photo_user_blank_big

20 posts

back to top
Rate

Rate This | Posted 5 months ago

 

wow...ms.wong must be very smart to have thought of this idea!She's very admirable especially that her invention is intended for healthcare of people in the developing countries..thumbs up