IIT launches a Covid-19 Test Bus in Mumbai — capable of conducting 5 million tests per month
May 8, 2020, 16:05 IST
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- As coronavirus cases surge in the city, Mumbai gets its first Covid-19 Test Bus.
- The Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Alumni Council launched a test bus that can reduce the cost of testing by over 80% without compromising on the testing capacity.
- According to the alumni body, this will facilitate a “100x increase in testing capacity, hopefully within a hundred days.”
On Maharashtra Day on May 1, the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Alumni Council launched a test bus that can reduce the cost of testing by over 80% without compromising on the testing capacity. IIT Alumni Council is a global alumni body for all the twenty three IITs.
According to the alumni body, this will facilitate a “100x increase in testing capacity, hopefully within a hundred days.”
“The IIT Alumni Council has taken a proactive approach to supporting the Government’s efforts in fighting the Covid-19 challenge. We have acted swiftly and set up the IIT C19 Task Force to channelise the energies of the global IIT Alumni for this fight,” said Ravi Sharma, President, IIT Alumni Council.
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Up to five million tests per month
The IIT C19 Test Bus is based on the Kodoy architecture model that can facilitate affordable and rapid testing. It involves e-vehicles for sample selection & telemedicine, algorithm based pooled genetic testing and megalabs that are capable of conducting up to five million tests per month per lab.
“The Covid-19 Test Bus is based on indigenous technology and to the best of our knowledge, is the first vehicle of its kind in the world with onboard genetic testing, AI-based teleradiology and contactless sample collection. We chose Mumbai as the launch location given the relatively high number of cases in the city,” Sharma said.
How does it work?
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At first, a digital chest x-ray would be carried out and sent to the doctors online. The healthcare staff will then use artificial intelligence to see the probability of a person having Coronavirus. “Then we collect the swab from the mouth and throat which is done across a glass screen whilst fully protecting the technician from any kind of contact with the patient,” said Dr Muffazal Lakadawala, Chief Medical Officer at the NSCI hub.
These samples are then sent to the diagnostic centers. The test bus has a capacity to collect 10-15 test samples per hour.
To onboard the lab space on the test bus, the IIT Alumni Council has partnered with Krsnaa Diagnostics, a venture-capital funded laboratory in India.
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