HealthWatch: Dial a Diagnosis-Cell Phones to the Rescue: Medicine's Next Big Thing?

LOS ANGELES, Cali. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Almost seven billion of us use one, and now researchers say that phone you talk, text, and tweet with could one day do much more for your health.

Hannah Gooch is allergic to eggs.

"We did a strict avoidance," Necia Joy Gooch, Hannah's mom, told Ivanhoe.

Spike Loy has diabetes.

"Since I was seven and a half, I had to take between two and 10 blood tests a day," Spike said.

Both could one day benefit from a medical breakthrough that you carry around every day.

"You can imagine your cell phone working like a very advanced microscope for looking at various different specimen," Aydogan Ozcan, PhD, Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering and BioEngineering, UCLA, told Ivanhoe.

Researchers at UCLA created various attachments that fit on smart phones. One can perform an HIV screening. Another ONE detects allergens in food. A special tube measures allergens optically with the phone's camera.

"You can do this for peanuts or you can do this for other kinds of allergens," Dr. Ozcan said.

Other attachments measure the presence of E. coli in food, blood cell counts, and blood sugar levels. Cell phones are less expensive than a large lab and can be used in the field with immediate results.

Originally posted here:

HealthWatch: Dial a Diagnosis-Cell Phones to the Rescue: Medicine's Next Big Thing?

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