Published 17 October 2012 21:06 1107 Views
A Ugandan doctor has invented a microfluidic chip to test for tuberculosis that can do the work of dozens of laboratory technicians, saving time and money. Dr Frederick Balagadde has now brought the technology to Durban, South Africa where a new $40m centre for HIV and tuberculosis research has opened. Balagadde hopes to develop his invention further and engage in cutting-edge research in an area suffering from these two major epidemics. South Africa has one of the highest rates of HIV in the world and because tuberculosis flourishes in people with deficient immune systems it is the leading cause of death in HIV patients. Al Jazeera's Tania Page reports from Durban.
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