Sixteen-year-old
Jack Andraka's innovative mind led him to create a new way to detect
pancreatic, ovarian and lung cancer. "I created a new way to detect
pancreatic, ovarian and lung cancer that costs three cents and takes
five minutes to run," he said. After a close friend died from
pancreatic cancer, this 16-year-old from Crownsville, Maryland,
unleashed his hyper-drive intellect on preventing more cancer deaths.
"It's 168 times faster, over 26,000 times less expensive, and over 400
times more sensitive than our current methods of diagnosis," he
said. Tinkering in his room and using information readily available
online, he came up with a new way to detect cancer. "85 percent of all
pancreatic cancers are diagnosed late, when someone has less than a two
percent chance of survival. And our current test costs $800 per test and
misses 30 percent of all pancreatic cancers," he said. He won last
year's Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. The sweet
validation came with $100,000 in scholarships, but Jack Andraka's got
his eye on even bigger things. "The name of the competition is called
the Tricorder XPRIZE," he said. "It's a $10 million prize. Essentially
what you have to do is develop something the size of a smartphone that
you scan over your skin and it will diagnose any disease instantly."
Jack is fielding a team of other high-schoolers to compete against 300
teams of adult scientists and corporations in the Qualcomm Tricorder
XPRIZE competition. He says youth is an advantage -- that new eyes are
more likely to solve old problems.
Note:
Let's hope this invention gets fast tracked and makes it to market.
Notice how little attention this exciting development received. To read
about many potential cancer cures reported in major media which have not
made it to market for financial reasons,. For a treasure trove of great news articles which will inspire you to make a difference,
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