Next research steps include wider national and international testing of HemaApp, collecting more data to improve accuracy rates, and using smartphones to try to detect abnormal hemoglobin properties that could help screen for sickle cell disease and other blood disorders.
For more information on HemaApp, contact the UbiComp research team at hemaapp cs. If you're trying to subscribe with a non-UW email address, please email uwnews uw. UW News. Search UW News Search for:. For UW employees Submission guidelines Submission form. Tap Into Your Health. No Needles. No Appointments. Privacy Guaranteed. Easy to Use Step-by-step instructions to help you nail pun intended your test every time. Track Your Health See your test result history, and share them instantly with your physician.
Need Help? Track Your Health See your test result history and share instantly with your physician. How does AnemoCheck Mobile work? HemaApp gives medical professionals a way to see if patients have anemia simply by shining the phone's flash against their skin. The app estimates hemoglobin concentrations -- anemia is characterized by low levels of hemoglobin or red blood cells -- by analyzing the color of a person's blood.
UW's researchers found that it was most accurate when used with a low-cost LED lighting attachment on top of the flash, allowing it to see more of what's under the patient's skin. In fact, it was as accurate as the Masimo Pronto, the expensive FDA-approved machine that can measure hemoglobin non-invasively using a device clipped to a person's finger. A smartphone loaded with the HemaApp will be much cheaper and accessible for medical professionals in developing nations.
This team of researchers built on the work by another U of Washington group that developed an app that can detect jaundice in babies. They plan to improve their technology further to be able to screen for sickle cell disease and other blood disorders.
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