Inventor of Africa’s first Medical Tablet Arthur Zang from Cameroun Wins Rolex Award

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Arthur Zang is one of the five young visionaries from Africa, India, Europe and the Middle East announced today at London’s leading scientific institution, the Royal Society, as winners of the 2014 Rolex Awards for Enterprise.

We just got this interesting report from Africa Press Organisation that Arthur Zang, 26, from Cameroon who has invented what is believed to be Africa’s first medical tablet, that will allow health-care workers in rural areas to send the results of cardiac tests to heart specialists via a mobile-phone connection has won the 2014  Rolex Awards for Enterprise.

This year’s Young Laureates – aged 30 and under – impress by both their leadership qualities and in their ability to harness technology in an original way to improve the well-being of the community and the environment,as well as to advance scientific knowledge.
The five Young Laureates were chosen by an international Jury of eight eminent experts who reviewed a shortlist from among 1,800 applicants from all over the world. The Laureates will each receive 50,000 Swiss francs to advance their projects. Others include;

Rolex Awards
Neeti Kailas, 29, India – aims to vastly increase screening of newborn babies for hearing loss, through an inexpensive, easy-to-use device, and to set up an associated network of health-care professionals in India who can diagnose or treat deafness.

Olivier Nsengimana, 30, Rwanda – is promoting breeding programmes and the release of Rwanda’s captive, endangered grey crowned-cranes. The iconic bird, a symbol of wealth and longevity in Rwanda, is a victim of its own beauty, and is often kept as a pet.

Inventor of Africa’s first Medical Tablet Arthur Zang from Cameroun Wins Rolex Award

Francesco Sauro, 29, Italy – is exploring the vast quartzite caves of South America’s fabled tabletop mountains on the border of Venezuela and Brazil, making discoveries of unique worlds that have evolved in isolation over millennia.

Hosam Zowawi, 29, Saudi Arabia – is developing rapid tests to detect the presence of antibiotic resistant bacteria, now considered a global threat to human health. He also plans a regional public campaign warning of the dangers of the overuse and misuse of antibiotics.

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Source: http://techtrendsng.com/