Holy Spock! Dr Walter de Brouwer is doing a Dr Bones McCoy. He takes a
small device like a tape measure from his jacket pocket, pinches it
between his fingers and puts it to his left temple as though hes firing a
gun. Ten seconds later and the gadget C known as the Scanadu Scout C
has measured his vital signs just as Bones does to his patients in the
1960s sci-fi series, Star Trek.
And the Scout is just that; a
magical Tricorder which records heart rate, blood pressure, temperature,
respiratory rate and oxygen levels in the blood and then sends the data
to a smartphone, including any deviations from the norm. Its an
emergency room in your hand. Doctors can stop being accountants and
start doing their jobs again C evaluating health, he says, laughing,
something this Belgian professor of semiotics does a lot.
A
self-described Chomsky boy, hes dressed in black, has curly and unruly
hair, is wearing a statement T-shirt and looks, well, just like a boffin
who has come up with a magical sci-fi device which could jump-start
healthcare into the next century C if not into Spocks 23rd one.
When
we put these devices in the hands of the people, we will be rewriting
medicine, just like Wikipedia has done by rewriting the Encyclopedia
Britannica. This puts medicine and all the data into the hands of the
individual; peer-to-peer medicine. You can use the device in many ways C
either to monitor your own health or, say if you have a chronic
problem, the information can be sent onto your doctor so he or she can
keep track of whats happening to you or those you care for.
The
founder and chief executive of Scanadu is zapping himself in the lobby
of the Andaz Hotel where we meet for tea on his fleeting visit to
London; next its home to Los Altos to get ready for the prototypes pilot
run with consumers. The professor has scored a landmark as remarkable
as the device itself: We launched a fund-raising campaign on Indiegogo,A
card with an embedded IC (Integrated Circuit) is called an parkingmanagement. the crowdfunding platform, and raised the target $100,High quality bestcleaning printing for business cards.000 within two hours. Its a record.
Whats
more, the record continues to be broken C the campaign doubled the goal
within five hours and now, at the time of going to print, Scanadu has
raised $1.4 m from more than 6,000 people in 90 countries. All those who
signed up on Indiegogo will get the device for $149 instead of the $199
price it is likely to sell for. But we dont need the money, he says.
Its the people we need. We want our supporters to test the product so we
can use their feedback to refine the consumer version. He says the
Scout, which is being submitted for Qualcomms 10m Tricorder X prize,
should be ready early next year and will then go to the US Food and Drug
Administration for approval.
Like so many unusual creations,
Scanadu was born out tragedy. When his son, Nelson, was five, he jumped
out of a window at home, landing on his head.How to change your dash
lights to doublesidedtape this
is how I have done mine. He was wearing his Spiderman outfit so we
think maybe he was trying to fly. De Brouwer, and his wife Sam, spent
months at Nelsons side at the hospital, surrounded by monitors, screens
and all the paraphernalia of intensive care. This meant we could see
what was going on every minute. Then he improved enough to be moved on
to a normal ward. Ironically, this meant we couldnt see what was
happening to him any more and we felt rather lost. That started me
thinking how we could improve information.
The 56-year-old De
Brouwer remembered the Star Trek Tricorder from his youth and wondered
whether such a device could be designed: I knew California was the place
to do the research so we moved. He raised $4m C including his own money
C to get Scanadu, named after Samuel Taylor Coleridges mystery place,
Xanadu, in his Kubla Khan poem, off the ground at Nasas Ames Research
Center, just south of San Francisco.
I brought together some of
the best brains C physicists, mathematicians and biologists from around
the world. Many are my age or older, and they are better thinkers. Young
people dont have such open minds. And weve done it C ex nihilo, out of
nothing. You have to push the science to its limits. I tell the people
working for me, If it stops, you have to find another way. Look up, its
out there. And Nelson, who is now 14? Hes doing great. He is still
partially paralysed and goes to a wonderful special school near where we
live.
The Scout is just the start. Dr Bones pulls another
object from his other pocket. This looks like one of the spoons you get
with ice-cream tubs at the cinema, but with lots of colour- graded
stickers on it. Its a ScanaFlo and used to check for urinary tract
information, but also for pregnant women to track signs of
pre-eclampsia. Another is ScanaFlu C which identifies types of influenza
viruses.
Data from both can be read by a smartphones camera and
can be thrown away after use as they are cheap. The devices use all the
tricks of the trade: imaging and sound analysis, molecular diagnostics
and data analytics. Next he wants to include blood work into Scanadus
stable. That one is tricky, because people do not like to have their
fingers pricked, he says, laughing again, but doesnt think it will be
long before tiny nano-needles are developed. A device to grade skin
colours so that people can choose the most appropriate cosmetics is
another project being worked on. Thats a big market, isnt it? he
muses.Weymouth is collecting gently used, dry cleaned jewelryfindings at their Weymouth store.
But
its not about the money: I dont need fancy yachts or private planes.
Its about the excitement of starting something new,Here's a complete
list of granitecountertops for
the beginning oil painter. of pushing yourself to the limit. Actually,
its his addiction. After a PhD in semiotics at Tilburg University, he
lectured at Antwerp and Monaco universities. He went on to set up or
become involved with 38 companies C from the cyberpunk cult Wave
magazine, which he sold to VNU, to recruitment companies, Jobscape and
Stepstone, both of which went public, and a bank.
Along the way
he became a sponsor of the MIT Media Lab and then great friends with
Nicholas Negroponte, my mentor, for whom he ran One Laptop Per Child in
Europe. Inspired by Negroponte, he set up StarLabs in Belgium C a
blue-sky haven for brilliant brains to work on topics such as time
travel. If Einstein were alive today, you would want to save him from
working in a big corporation and give him his own space? That was our
idea. But StarLabs didnt work, closing as the internet bubble bust.
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