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It is far too true in our society that more often than not, the fanciest, more ridiculously over complicated way to solve a problem is often the most favored manner. Too often, if you did not know better, you would actually think that we were making a concrete effort to inhibit our own effectiveness and progress, by passive aggressively making tons of rules and spending tons of unnecessary time and money on solutions that are of only a moderate level of effective value in combating the problem that they supposedly do. With that being the case, this is the kind of solution that pretty much blows one’s mind, from a standpoint of societal convention.
If you have ever been wounded, you know how nasty a wound can get in a hurry. Puss and bacteria are just parts of the game, especially when you received your injury in a dirty place (such as during a natural disaster, where it may have been hours of filth before you could receive any sort of medical treatment). There is a type of pump which is used to accelerate the healing process and reduce the frequency with which bandages need to be changed – that costs at least $100 a day to rent, and weighs 10 pounds or more (partially because of its batteries). But of course, thanks to an MIT PhD candidate named Danielle Zurovcik, that bit of expensive, heavy nonsense is done with. Her version of the pump costs $3, weighs half a pound, and can be charged up with a hand pump.
This is roughly analogous to a luxury car costing less than $1,000, getting a few thousand miles to the gallon of gasoline, and being small and light enough that you could comfortably carry it around for awhile. In this passive aggressive era, where it seems as if every new medical breakthrough has got to be huge, expensive and unbelievably complicated, this is the kind of innovation that all medicine cries out for more of. What could be next? Are there going to be heart catheters that work just like plumbing augers?