20200517
20200515
Face masks that LIGHT UP under a scanner if you have coronavirus could be used to identify infected people in hospital waiting rooms and airports
Researchers from MIT and Harvard are working on adapting a technology first developed in 2016 to quickly and cheaply detect signs of the Zika virus.
- Sensors in masks are able to detect signs of the virus in saliva after three hours
- When they detect the virus the mask then emits a very faint fluorescent glow
- This glow can then be picked up by cheap handheld scanners called fluorimeters
- Developers of the masks hope to have them ready for distribution at the end of the summer but say they have a small team so it may take longer than that . MIRROR
How to live longer - the spice you should add to your shopping list to prevent early death
HOW to live longer: Prevent an early death by eating a healthy, balanced diet, and by doing regular exercise. But you could also increase your life expectancy, while also lowering your risk of cancer symptoms, by adding this spice to your daily routine. Adding more turmeric to your diet could protect against some types of cancer, experts revealed. EXPRESS
Coronavirus vaccine: UK scientists now hopeful of groundbreaking virus jab THIS summer
BRITISH experts have said they are on track to produce a coronavirus vaccine this summer, it was revealed yesterday. The team hopes to produce one million doses of the vaccine by September. The Cambridge-based drugs giant has said it could scale up to 100 million by the end of the year. Express
20200508
More evidence vitamin D can help against coronavirus: Study finds patients with a severe deficiency are TWICE as likely to die from COVID-19
- Patients with severe deficiency were twice as likely to experience complications
- This, the US researchers claim, includes a higher risk of dying from COVID-19
- Builds on research which linked low levels of vitamin D to a higher mortality rate.
- DailyMail
20200506
New 'test, track and trace' app CAN stop second winter coronavirus peak, claims Sir Patrick Vallance
A second peak of coronavirus cases can be avoided with the help of the NHS's new contact-tracing app. The 'test, track and trace' app works via Bluetooth and will alert people if they have been in close contact with someone who later fell ill with COVID-19.
The Government is preparing to partially lift social distancing rules as part of an exit strategy to the lockdown which will be announced by Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Sunday.
The app is a key part of the strategy. Sir Patrick said: 'If we do test, track and trace well and we keep the social distancing measures at the right level we should be able to avoid a second wave, so I'm at the more optimistic side.'
However, the Government conceded that a series of problems had been found by the app's developers which needed to be fixed.
20200505
TECH, TRACK AND TRACE NHS app launched that will ‘put easing coronavirus lockdown in hands of the public’
The app — called NHS Covid-19 — uses Bluetooth to log when another user’s smartphone has been nearby.
If a person develops symptoms, they tell the app and it helps immediately organise a test.
An anonymous alert is automatically sent to those the person has been near, urging users to self-isolate if necessary.
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