

The companys filing status is listed as Active and its File Number is 9818852C42. While doctors normally need to pump oxygen via an Ambu bag valve mask by hand on patients struggling to breathe, Adawe’s contraption - made up of a wooden box, pipes and an electric system - pushes oxygen from an air tank into a mask placed over the patient’s mouth. is a Louisiana Trade Name filed On April 22, 2009. Meanwhile in Somalia, which has limited capacity to respond to its growing caseload, 21-year-old Mohamed Adawe has invented an automated resuscitator. In Ghana, the Academic City College in Accra and Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Kumasi managed to produce a ventilator costing between $500 and $1,000 which takes only an hour to assemble.Ī group of Rwandan biomedical scientists at the Integrated Polytechnic Regional College in Kigali have also been testing a locally made prototype ventilator. The ventilator is undergoing clinical trials. “We are making machines with locally available material … pandemics can come and go but other conditions also require critical care,” he said. In Kenya, engineering students in collaboration with the medical department at the Kenyatta University, produced a low-cost ventilator at a tenth of the price of an imported machine - estimated at $10,000.ĭoctor Gordon Ogweno, a medical professor at the university said Kenya had about 50 working ventilators for a population of more than 50 million. Most African countries have only a handful of the machines and 10 have none at all, according to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. “If one of those passengers tested positive we are now able to trace all the contacts who checked in on that particular vehicle, ” said Tairus Ooyi, the lead app developer and data scientist at FabLab.Īnother busy area of innovation has been the production of ventilators, which have been in short supply even in rich countries as COVID-19 patients needing oxygen have swamped hospitals.
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With it, passengers entering a minibus taxi - known as a matatu - can input a simple code on their phone along with the vehicle registration number.

Developers in Kenya’s thriving tech scene are among several on the continent working on contact tracing apps.įabLab, an innovation hub in western Kisumu has developed an application called Msafari (Safari means journey in Swahili) which can track passengers on public transport.
