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Medicine Science

Redesigned Cooler Reinvents Tuberculosis Treatment 22

First time accepted submitter sarfralogy writes with this news about a cooler redesigned by MIT that is saving lives. "It started with a basic soft drink cooler, a need for easier management of tuberculosis and $150,000 in innovation support. A big challenge in managing tuberculosis is keeping the medicine cool, in addition to tracking and monitoring dose administration. These challenges can be life-threatening, especially in less-developed countries, where refrigerators and fancy cooling devices are rare; ice must be trucked in on a daily basis to keep medicines at controlled temperatures. A redesigned cooler with the ability to keep the medicine cool and record when medicine is dispensed is aiming to solve both these problems. The design of the cooler is simple and practical — common characteristics of a scientifically sound experiment or innovation. It's nothing more than a standard soft drink cooler but the team from MIT's Little Devices Lab equipped the cooler with the ability to sound an alert when the temperature inside the cooler becomes too high and transmit data wirelessly using a cellphone transmitter whenever the cooler is opened."
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Redesigned Cooler Reinvents Tuberculosis Treatment

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 04, 2012 @12:09PM (#40209697)

    Why is there always such a negative reaction to folks that are working hard to make a difference? You know, people that have actually done something useful instead of just snarking on message boards? From the article:

    ... it can run on either plug-in power or solar cells, and contains circuitry to monitor the temperature inside and transmit an alarm if it rises too high. ...
    In addition, to track compliance, each cooler records the exact date and time when the box is opened, which allows a single dose packet to be dispensed. A built-in cellphone transmitter sends information on temperature and cooler activity to a central health facility where the data can be stored and monitored. ... The daily ice deliveries cost $600 a year — about double the cost of the CoolComply system — and “ice doesn’t send you a message” to show that medicine has been taken, he says.

    Additionally, the article mentions that opening the lid dispenses a single dose and tracks that it was dispensed.

    I, for one, congratulate the inventors and wish them luck in commercializing the product.

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