My Name is Paul H Cosentino. I started this Blog in 2011 because of what I believe to be wrongdoings in town government. This Blog is to keep the citizens of Templeton informed. It is also for the citizens of Templeton to post their comments and concerns.
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Monday, December 30, 2019
Invisible Ink Could Reveal whether Kids Have Been Vaccinated
Invisible Ink Could Reveal whether Kids Have Been Vaccinated
The technology embeds immunization records into a child’s skin
Researchers use microneedles to inject quantum dots with medical information into pig skin. Credit: Tom Buehler MIT
Keeping track of vaccinations
remains a major challenge in the developing world, and even in many
developed countries, paperwork gets lost, and parents forget whether
their child is up to date. Now a group of Massachusetts Institute of
Technology researchers has developed a novel way to address this
problem: embedding the record directly into the skin.
Along with the vaccine, a child would be injected with a bit of dye
that is invisible to the naked eye but easily seen with a special
cell-phone filter, combined with an app that shines near-infrared light
onto the skin. The dye would be expected to last up to five years,
according to tests on pig and rat skin andhuman skin in a dish.
The system—which has not yet been tested in children—would provide
quick and easy access to vaccination history, avoid the risk of clerical
errors, and add little to the cost or risk of the procedure, according
to the study, published Wednesday in Science Translational Medicine.
“Especially in developing countries where medical records may not be
as complete or as accessible, there can be value in having medical
information directly associated with a person,” says Mark Prausnitz, a
bioengineering professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology, who was
not involved in the new study. Such a system of recording medical
information must be extremely discreet and acceptable to the person
whose health information is being recorded and his or her family, he
says. “This, I think, is a pretty interesting way to accomplish those
goals.”
The research, conducted by M.I.T. bioengineers Robert Langer and Ana
Jaklenec and their colleagues, uses a patch of tiny needles called
microneedles to provide an effective vaccination without a
teeth-clenching jab. Microneedles are embedded in a Band-Aid-like device
that is placed on the skin; a skilled nurse or technician is not
required. Vaccines delivered with microneedles also may not need to be
refrigerated, reducing both the cost and difficulty of delivery, Langer
and Jaklenec say.
Delivering the dye required the researchers to find something that
was safe and would last long enough to be useful. “That’s really the
biggest challenge that we overcame in the project,” Jaklenec says,
adding that the team tested a number of off-the-shelf dyes that could be
used in the body but could not find any that endured when exposed to
sunlight. The team ended up using a technology called quantum dots, tiny
semiconducting crystals that reflect light and were originally
developed to label cells during research. The dye has been shown to be
safe in humans.
The approach raises some privacy concerns, says Prausnitz, who helped
invent microneedle technology and directs Georgia Tech’s Center for
Drug Design, Development and Delivery.
“There may be other concerns that
patients have about being ‘tattooed,’ carrying around personal medical
information on their bodies or other aspects of this unfamiliar approach
to storing medical records,” he says. “Different people and different
cultures will probably feel differently about having an invisible
medical tattoo.”
When people were still getting vaccinated for smallpox, which has
since been eradicated worldwide, they got a visible scar on their arm
from the shot that made it easy to identify who had been vaccinated and
who had not, Jaklenec says. “But obviously, we didn’t want to give
people a scar,” she says, noting that her team was looking for an
identifier that would be invisible to the naked eye. The researchers
also wanted to avoid technologies that would raise even more privacy
concerns, such as iris scans and databases with names and identifiable
data, she says.
The work was funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and
came about because of a direct request from Microsoft founder and
philanthropist Bill Gates himself, who has been supporting efforts to
wipe out diseases such as polio and measles across the world, Jaklenec
says. “If we don’t have good data, it’s really difficult to eradicate
disease,” she says.
The researchers hope to add more detailed information to the dots,
such as the date of vaccination. Along with them, the team eventually
wants to inject sensors that could also potentially be used to track
aspects of health such as insulin levels in diabetics, Jaklenec says.
This approach is likely to be one of many trying to solve the problem
of storing individuals’ medical information, says Ruchit Nagar, a
fourth-year student at Harvard Medical School, who also was not involved
in the new study. He runs a company, called Khushi Baby, that is also
trying to create a system for tracking such information, including
vaccination history, in the developing world.
Working in the northern Indian state of Rajasthan, Nagar and his team
have devised a necklace, resembling one worn locally, which compresses,
encrypts and password protects medical information. The necklace uses
the same technology as radio-frequency identification (RFID) chips—such
as those employed in retail clothing or athletes’ race bibs—and provides
health care workers access to a mother’s pregnancy history, her child’s
growth chart and vaccination history, and suggestions on what
vaccinations and other treatments may be needed, he says. But Nagar
acknowledges the possible concerns all such technology poses. “Messaging
and cultural appropriateness need to be considered,” he says.
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