By Laura Newnham
A group of five female
students from Makerere University in Uganda have successfully created a
test kit connected to a smartphone app that is able to detect harmful
vaginal bacteria that cause bacterial vaginosis and other infections.
In a video posted to YouTube, the team known as Team Code Gurus
explain exactly how they created the app. The test kit, known as Her
Health BVKit, consists of hardware and a software application.
The hardware is the actual test kit that connects to the smartphone
app via Bluetooth. By placing a urine or vaginal discharge sample onto
the kit, PH values can be sent to the application. The app then
interprets whether the user has healthy or unhealthy amounts of vaginal
bacteria. If there are unhealthy levels of bacteria present, the
application recommends that the user seeks medical attention and
indicates where their nearest doctor or clinic is.
The team's programmer, Ndagire Esther explains that the team would
like to work with NGOs and other health facilities to supply rural women
with the kit:
"We plan on marketing our application through NGOs, clinics and
pharmacies. We hope the NGOs can help us reach rural areas where women
who don't have the opportunity to test their bacteria will be able to
use our application."
She goes on to explain that the idea is to make the hardware and
software to make it easy to use and widely available for women to test
themselves every month for harmful bacteria that could indicate
infection.
The application could bring hope to a country where health knowledge
and accessibility remains a challenge. Despite the declining HIV rates
in Uganda, there is still much work to do when it comes to sexual
health.
The Ugandan Ministry of Health website explains that a third of the
population is aged 10-24 and currently more babies are born to teenage
mothers than to adult women. The Ministry adds that whilst over 90% of
people aged 20-24 know about condoms, less than 50% had ever used a
condom. This indicates just how at risk of infection young Ugandan women
are.
The journal of Sexual Transmitted Infections, part of the British
Medical Journal, recently published a study into bacterial vaginosis
amongst Ugandan women that were considered to be "high risk for HIV".
The study found that 905 (88%) of the women involved tested positive for
bacterial vaginosis at least once during the course of the study.
Source: Health24
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