Jan 29, 2008
Cheap (tens of dollars) genetic lab on a chip systems could help with pandemic control
Posted by Brian Wang in categories: biological, defense, existential risks, futurism, lifeboat
Cross posted from Next big future
Since a journal article was submitted to the Royal Society of Chemistry, the U of Alberta researchers have already made the processor and unit smaller and have brought the cost of building a portable unit for genetic testing down to about $100 Cdn. In addition, these systems are also portable and even faster (they take only minutes). Backhouse, Elliott and McMullin are now demonstrating prototypes of a USB key-like system that may ultimately be as inexpensive as standard USB memory keys that are in common use – only tens of dollars. It can help with pandemic control and detecting and control tainted water supplies.
This development fits in with my belief that there should be widespread inexpensive blood, biomarker and genetic tests to help catch disease early and to develop an understanding of biomarker changes to track disease and aging development. We can also create adaptive clinical trials to shorten the development and approval process for new medical procedures
The device is now much smaller than size of a shoe-box (USB stick size) with the optics and supporting electronics filling the space around the microchip