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Woman creates vaccine reminder

Ana Duarte 于 2017-05-22 16:10 分享

About the solution

The use of this bracelet allows mothers to keep record of the immunization of their children. There is no language or literacy barriers regarding the using of this device because it uses symbols. The bracelet is to be worn by a child from birth to age four, with the goal that more children will live to age five. The device is simple and non-mechanical, and its production is low cost.

By looking at the bracelet, the mother will know the number and type of vaccines her child has received at any point in time and the date of the child’s next immunization. To supplement the bracelet, posters and note cards containing the same graphical information as the bracelet will be distributed to mothers and nurses. 

“Each year four million children die before age five, and one out of five of those children dies of a vaccine-preventable disease”, Braun said.

The use of this invention will also allow nurses to be able to see more patients at their clinics, and the Peruvian Ministry of Health will cut the total costs of immunization.

“You can see how excited moms are to use the bracelets because, maybe for the first time ever, they are empowered with full understanding of their children’s vaccinations, and that knowledge enables them to be more engaged in their children’s health”, the inventor explained.

Adapted from: http://bit.ly/1KQz7D3

More info: http://www.almasanaproject.org/
https://youtu.be/kwIllekd0k8

这些解决方案不应包括使用药物,化学品或生物制品(包括食品);创伤性设备;冒犯性的,商业或内在危险的内容。该解决方案未经医学验证。请谨慎进行!如果您有任何疑问,请咨询健康专家。

DISCLAIMER: This story was written by someone who is not the author of the solution, therefore please be advised that, although it was written with the utmost respect for the innovation and the innovator, there can be some incorrect statements. If you find any errors please contact the patient Innovation team via info@patient-innovation.com

关于发明者

Laura Braun, from USA, invented a baby vaccination reminder band, after she went to Peru, in 2009, and noticed that indigenous, low-income moms weren’t remembering to bring their children in to the clinic for vaccinations on time, although vaccines were available for free and moms knew vaccines were important for their children’s health. She also created Alma Sana, in 2012, a social enterprise and non-profit aimed at reducing health inequalities among populations.

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