What's new

Female Saudi researcher developing mobile MRI scanner

Mosamania

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Jun 19, 2011
Messages
10,171
Reaction score
5
Country
Saudi Arabia
Location
Saudi Arabia
Female Saudi researcher developing mobile MRI scanner
Hayat-Sindi-300x183.jpg


DUBAI: Doctors across the Middle East are excited over a female medical research from Saudi Arabia’s announcement that she was developing a mobile MRI scanner in an attempt to help reduce the cost and time of diagnosing illnesses.

The new scanner, Arabian Business reported, would enable doctors to check for organ, bone and tissue damage throughout the Arab world, however, she did not give a timetable for when the project would be completed.

Hayat Sindi, who was recently ranked number 9 on the CEO Middle East list of most powerful Arab women, wants to develop the MRI scanning in a simple and cheap manner, particularly for older patients and those who have joint disorders.

“I am writing the pattern at the moment,” she told Arabian Business in an interview. “There are so many people with arthritis and older people who struggle to get up on to the bed [to be scanned], and they are in a lot of pain. Especially if they don’t speak English. It can be very uncomfortable.”

Most MRI scans take around 15-20 minutes to complete, and can be expensive.

Sindi said her product aims to make the process more efficient, and should be available within three years, but did not give specifics on the date.

Female Saudi researcher developing mobile MRI scanner - Bikya Masr
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

JEDDAH – Dr. Hayat Sindi, a Saudi medical researcher, is planning to develop a portable MRI scanner in a bid to ease the process of diagnosing organ, bone and tissue diseases for people in the Arab world, Arabian Business reported Tuesday.
"I am writing the pattern at the moment," she told Arabian Business in an interview. "There are so many people with arthritis and older people who struggle to get up on to the bed (to be scanned), and they are in a lot of pain. Especially if they don’t speak English. It can be very uncomfortable."
Most MRI scans take around 15-20 minutes to complete, and can be expensive. Sindi said her product aims to make the process more efficient, and should be available within three years.
"It (MRI scanning) also takes a long time. This one is very quick. And it will be very cheap. Usually it takes an average of four-five years to develop, or six if it’s complicated. But something like this it should take around three years."
Sindi, whose research into diagnostics and biotechnology is internationally recognized, is an advocate of affordable medicine.
She began her career in the UK after acquiring a BSc degree in pharmacology from Kings College in London and a PhD in biotechnology from Cambridge University, for which she was awarded a scholarship.
As the first female in Gulf to gain such qualifications, her first step was to found Sonoptix Technology with seed funding from Saudi Arabia, where she developed a tool capable of cheaply diagnosing breast cancer early on through its ability to detect single molecules.
In 2006, Sindi was invited by Harvard University professor George Whiteside to join him and his team as a visiting scholar in Boston, and has since played a pivotal role in founding the non-for-profit company Diagnostics For All (DFA).
The organization, which won business competitions at both Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has since combined biotechnology and diagnostics research to create a new product able of detecting liver failure, which will be rolled out in third world countries.
Sindi said the product was due to be launched in one of these countries very soon.
"We are targeting developing countries first, and countries where patients have suffered from drugs taken for HIV and tuberculosis. That’s where you are going to make a difference, because they often suffer with liver failure.
"I cannot say which country, there are three possible countries, but I cannot say which one."

Saudi Gazette - Saudi medical scholar developing affordable MRI scanner
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
.
you can post this kind of thread in another place.not in world affairs.
 
. .
Wow it would be gr8 technology for remote areas as well as in villages where you can't effort to established permanent MRI facility ...
 
. .
Now, this is something which must be appreciated, specially because of an Arab and on top of that a women. Keep it up

PS: IMHO this kind of news should be in Members Club as the project is not completed and there is no timeline of completion, otherwise there will hell of threads of this type in World Affairs
 
. .
We already have trailed towed mobile MRI scanners which roam around the city?
 
.
you can post this kind of thread in another place.not in world affairs.

you mean we should only have posts about the alien technology that Iran has developed to blow up the US here?

Achievement in science and medicine or anything that is good for mankind should have no country or borders.
 
.
We already have trailed towed mobile MRI scanners which roam around the city?

No that is the Mobile Hospital program the ones with the buses and the surgery roams and tents etc. This is about a more affordable and easy to use MRI scanner which will be an evolution in medicine if completed.
 
. . . . .
Maybe she can call the Polish and other western countries, because mobile MRI-scanners are common here:

read the article again. the header is deceptive. she is making a newer better portable MRI , cheaper too. she is redesigning and developing a new software to it too

Come on guys - a bit of respect for members of the opposite sex - especially those that are married.
Lady must be commended in her achievement - lets hope for more

well said: they look at women as objects of desire and not respect.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom