A Mother Built a Solar-Powered Unit To Save Infants From a Common Disease
A small box glowing with a brilliant blue light has saved the lives of numerous babies since its inception, and it's only getting started.
This innovative box is called Crib A’Glow, and it's a low-cost phototherapy solution for treating newborn babies with neonatal jaundice, a condition in which a baby's skin and the whites of the eyes appear yellow due to excess bilirubin. When untreated, this ailment, which is extremely common as newborns haven’t developed the liver function to properly process the bilirubin, can cause hearing loss, blindness, brain damage, and even death, which is why instant treatment is recommended. This is where the novel phototherapy unit comes in.
Saving tiny hearts thanks to technology
Oboro decided to find a means to save millions of infants from jaundice and give them a chance to receive treatment before permanent brain damage occurs. After all, despite all of the dangerous side effects of severe jaundice, the disease is manageable once diagnosed. In fact, phototherapy, which exposes infants to light, eliminates excess bilirubin, and cures jaundice is the only thing needed; but, in many hospitals, scarcity of light units, and ignorance of both the dangers and severity of the disease can lead to irreversible outcomes.
To solve this issue, Oboro teamed up with medical professionals and biomedical engineers to build a prototype, and Crib A'Glow, a solar-powered, foldable, and low-cost phototherapy unit, was born. The unit's light rays focus on the baby’s body to ensure maximum efficiency while employing LED lights prevents skin burns, dehydration, and rashes, which can be common side-effects of such devices, according to the Guardian. Then, founding Tiny Hearts Technologies, a company dedicated to making solar-powered phototherapy cribs, would be Oboro's next mission.
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