Showing posts with label innovation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label innovation. Show all posts

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Making Eggs Without Chickens (Video)

 

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Argentine Auto Mechanic Designs Tool to Ease Births

The idea came to Jorge Odón as he slept. Somehow, he said, his unconscious made the leap from a YouTube video he had just seen on extracting a lost cork from a wine bottle to the realization that the same parlor trick could save a baby stuck in the birth canal.
Mr. Odón, 59, an Argentine car mechanic, built his first prototype in his kitchen, using a glass jar for a womb, his daughter’s doll for the trapped baby, and a fabric bag and sleeve sewn by his wife as his lifesaving device.
Unlikely as it seems, the idea that took shape on his counter has won the enthusiastic endorsement of the World Health Organization and major donors, and an American medical technology company has just licensed it for production.
With the Odón Device, an attendant slips a plastic bag inside a lubricated plastic sleeve around the head, inflates it to grip the head and pulls the bag until the baby emerges.
Doctors say it has enormous potential to save babies in poor countries, and perhaps to reduce cesarean section births in rich ones.
“This is very exciting,” said Dr. Mario Merialdi, the W.H.O.’s chief coordinator for improving maternal and perinatal health and an early champion of the Odón Device. “This critical moment of life is one in which there’s been very little advancement for years.”
About 10 percent of the 137 million births worldwide each year have potentially serious complications, Dr. Merialdi said. About 5.6 million babies are stillborn or die quickly, and about 260,000 women die in childbirth. Obstructed labor, which can occur when a baby’s head is too large or an exhausted mother’s contractions stop, is a major factor.
In wealthy countries, fetal distress results in a rush to the operating room. In poor, rural clinics, Dr. Merialdi said, “if the baby doesn’t come out, the woman is on her own.”
The current options in those cases are forceps — large, rounded pliers — or suction cups attached to the baby’s scalp. In untrained hands, either can cause hemorrhages, crush the baby’s head or twist its spine.
Although more testing is planned on the Odón Device, doctors said it appeared to be safe for midwives with minimal training to use.
Along the way, it has won research grants from the United States Agency for International Development and from Grand Challenges Canada. “We’ve given out $32 million for 61 different innovations, and this one is the farthest along,” said Dr. Peter A. Singer, the chief executive of Grand Challenges Canada.
The device will be manufactured by Becton, Dickinson and Company, or BD, of Franklin Lakes, N.J., which is better known for making syringes.

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Japanese convenience store to save winter snow to use in summer for air conditioning, and to use sunlight for heat in winter

On November 1, Japanese convenience store chain Lawson opened a new store in Yurihonjo, a town 'with large seasonal temperature differences, with warm to hot (and often humid) summers and cold (sometimes severely cold) winters.' A good spot to try out the 'rather unique features' RocketNews24 reported on this week:
In addition to solar panels, improved insulation, and LED light bulbs, this branch will also be testing out some new environmentally friendly features: Saving winter snow for summer air conditioning and using sunlight to heat the store!

The major point is that the company will be collecting and storing snow over the winter. The storage unit is nearly 100 cubic meters (about 3,531 cubic feet) in volume and apparently will be able to preserve the snow without using any electricity thanks to some miraculous insulation. [See image below.] In the summer, the snow will be used to air condition the store by running water through pipes routed through the container.

For those worried about staying warm this winter, Lawson has a rather novel way of keeping warm as well. Pipes are installed under the store floor, and water heated by the sun will be pumped through the pipes!

Both of these features are the first in the industry, giving Lawson some excellent ecological bragging rights.
If this experiment is successful, Lawson could extend it to other locations. Besides Japan, the company has shops in China, Indonesia, Thailand and in the U.S. – but only in one U.S. state – and that happens to be a state that never sees snow: Hawaii.

Maybe they can come up with an idea to harness the energy produced by all the surfers there.