Fascinating, and one hopes this makes it to market.

Udhay (who fought a battle with his better self to avoid this subject
line. You can see how that worked out.)

http://www.fastcompany.com/1616025/mit-student-develops-cutting-edge-low-cost-healing-for-the-developing-world

MIT Student Develops $3 Cutting-Edge Healing Device, Field Tested in Haiti
BY Cliff KuangWed Apr 14, 2010
The new device could radically improve healing times for tens of
millions, at a cost of $3.

No one really knows why, but for an open wound, simply applying
suction dramatically speeds healing times. (The theory is that the
negative pressure draws bacteria out, and encourages circulation.) But
for almost everyone, that treatment is out of reach--simply because
the systems are expensive--rentals cost at least $100 a day and need
to be recharged every six hours.

No more. Danielle Zurovcik, a doctoral student at MIT, has created a
hand-powered suction-healing system that costs about $3. The device is
composed of an airtight wound dressing, connected by a plastic tube to
a cylinder with accordion-like folds. Squeezing it creates the
suction, which lasts as long as there's no air leak. What's more,
where regular dressings need to be replaced up to three times a day--a
painful ordeal--the new cuff can be left on for several days.

Zurovcik originally intended to field-test the device in Rwanda, but
then the Haiti Earthquake struck. At the request of Partners in
Health, an NGO, she traveled to Haiti with 50 of the pumps.

Currently, Zurovcik is verifying the healing benefits of the device,
and developing a new model that can be readily carried and concealed.
The one technical hurdle that remains is ensuring the bandage seals
tightly--but after that, the device could benefit a huge portion of
the 50-60 million people in the developing world that suffer from
acute or chronic wounds.


-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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