4 Low-Cost Indian Innovations That Can Lead Our Fight Against Coronavirus

Testing kits, to ventilators, to robots, innovations in the wake of COVID-19 can also bring long-term changes in the Indian healthcare system

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Testing kits, to ventilators, to robots, innovations in the wake of COVID-19 can also bring long-term changes in the Indian healthcare system

Ever since COVID-19 hit the world, governments, including in India, have realized it is the low-cost innovations that will lead the fight against the virus. At a time when the number of coronavirus cases continues to mount and the healthcare system will likely be stretched, sooner than later, affordable testing kits and ventilators as well as technology that can take some burden off the healthcare staff can help India prepare itself better in the coming months.

We look at a few Indian innovations, led by premier educational institutes as well as startups in the country:

Low-cost testing kits

The Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi’s (IIT-D) Kusuma School of Biological Sciences has developed a low-cost testing kit for COVID-19, which recently got the nod from the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR). The test, according to IIT-D director V. Ramgopal Rao, can cost less than Rs 500. The institute’s website says that “this is the first probe-free assay for COVID-19 approved by ICMR and it will be useful for specific and affordable high throughput testing”. The testing kits, developed so far, were ‘probe-based’.

This month, Bengaluru-based Genei Laboratories became the first firm to get the licence from IIT-D to start commercial production of the kits. The institute plans to give non-exclusive open licences to companies meeting its criteria. The development comes at a time when there is a pressing need to ramp up India’s COVID-19 testing capacity. According to Statista, India’s per million testing figures on 18 May stood at 1,671 against 8,191 for Iran, 35,903 for the US and 64,977 for Spain.

In March, the Pune-based startup Mylab Discovery Solutions, a molecular diagnostic company, became the first Indian firm to get commercial approval for manufacturing of PCR testing kits. 

Robot to help healthcare workers

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