Current Affairs
Sudanese Scientist Invents Robot For Detecting Covid-19 Patients
10 May, 2020
AJMAN, United Arab Emirates (Sudanow) – Sudanese scientist and inventor Mohamed Osman Baloola has devised last month a smart robot that can remotely detect Covid-19 patients.
Baloola, a biomedical engineer, was named among The World's 500 Most Influential Arabs in 2012 and 2013 for his work on diabetes. He has won many awards including a science and innovation award at the Arabian Business Awards 2011, Dubai, Dh40,000 (11,000 US) during a Sharjah Television competition for his invention of a remote monitoring and control system for diabetes patients via mobile phone and Best Project on Biomedical Engineering- Biomedical Day 2008.
Baloola, deputy director of Ajman University’s Innovation Center, said in the University’s website that the robot, operating on the Internet of Things (IoT) and Artificial Intelligence (AI), includes a variety of sensors that can precisely detect Covid-19 symptoms, including fever, cough, heart rate, temperature, and humidity.
"It is also equipped with a sophisticated thermal camera and two contactless temperature sensors that can detect body temperature up to two meters away."
The robot further detects breathing difficulties with an SPO2 sensor which estimates the amount of oxygen in blood, he said. "There is also another sensor for detecting coughing."
“It has an audio alarm system that helps observe the physical distancing required, while the AI-operated voice assessment system detects patients through their voices," Baloola said.
The robot, meant to distantly detect Covid-19 patients, is aimed to protect all workers on the frontlines, mainly those in the health sector, against coronavirus.
It can be used in all airports, outlets, shopping centers, hospitals, clinics, universities, schools, metro stations and crowded places.
The self-operating robot can be run via a remote control, while the data collected can be seen, and checked online all over the world, he added.
E N D
Post your comments
Photo of the Week
Khartoum (Sudanow) — In just three days, the war in Sudan will complete its third year since it erupted on April 15, 2023. The conflict pits the Sudanese Armed Forces, supported by allied forces, against the rebel militia and its backers at both regional and international levels. Experts believe this war is no longer purely an internal affair; rather, it has evolved into...
MoreNew media
The Poll
Archives
-
20 April, 2026
Stories from Inside the Battlefield At the Threshold of Waiting: Stories of Families Searching for Their Sons
Khartoum (Sudanow) — Wars are not measured by the number of wounded and dead, but by the silent voids they leave in the hearts of the living—voids created by enforced disappearance, when a person turns into an unknown number or a suspended name between hope and despair. As the war in Sudan enters its fourth year, one of its most painful tragedies is becoming increasingly evident: the issue of missing persons, which ...
Sudanow is the longest serving English speaking magazine in the Sudan. It is chartarized by its high quality professional journalism, focusing on political, social, economic, cultural and sport developments in the Sudan. Sudanow provides in depth analysis of these developments by academia, highly ...
MoreRecent tweets
Tweets by Suda_nowFOLLOW Us On Facebook
Contact Us
Address: Sudan News Agency (SUNA) Building, Jamhoria Street, Khartoum - Sudan
Mobile:+249 909220011 / +249 912307547






