Grad student honoured for easier blood glucose testing

Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Shahid Haider, a systems design engineering master's student who is a member of the Vision and Image Processing Research Group, is the recipient of the 
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2014 Norman Edmund Inspiration Award for his research on handheld imaging to test blood glucose levels.
 

The international award is from Edmund Optics. It recognizes exceptional research that inspires others, in particular children, to pursue careers in science and technology by developing new devices to advance medical sciences and cure any illnesses that they may face in their lifetimes.

Rather than using a finger prick to test and monitor glucose levels for type 1 diabetes, Haider’s medical device would ease diabetes monitoring in children by using a non-contact handheld system that takes full field images of the eye’s aqueous humor to infer glucose concentrations.
Haider's research allows the images to be captured on a single detector in order to produce a compact design that will fit into the hands of a child.
By eliminating any pain associated with diabetes testing, Haider's work has the direct potential to improve the quality of life for those afflicted with diabetes, including reducing the risk of eye, kidney, and heart damage.
Haider's supervisor is Alexander Wong, a systems design engineering professor and the new Canada Research Chair in Medical Imaging Systems.