Dr. Kris Olson, who leads CIMIT's Global Health Initiative, just got featured in Scientific American 10: Guiding Science for Humanity. SciAm does a pleasant, if brief overview, of a physician who's at the forefront of changing the way we develop technologies for patients in developing countries.
From Scientific American:
One colleague told the Boston Globe that Olson is “The Man” when the topic turns to lifesaving technologies for the developing world. Last year Olson and the Center for Integration of Medicine and Innovative Technology (CIMIT)—a nonprofit consortium of Boston teaching hospitals and engineering schools—moved ahead with a program to demonstrate the effectiveness of $7 resuscitators, tubes through which a medical worker exhales into a newborn’s mouth. The program started after the 2004 South Asian tsunami. Since then, about 500 midwives in Aceh, Indonesia, have been trained to use the technology.
If want to learn more, go to CIMIT GHI. They even have a Facebook group.
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