Skip to Main Content
Yale Public Health Magazine

Noninvasive Malaria Test Could Be a Global Game Changer

Science & Society: Fall/Winter 2024
1 Minute Read

Almost half of the world’s population is at risk of malaria infection, with children and pregnant women at the highest risk of getting sick and dying from the disease. Current methods to detect this potentially deadly infection rely on obtaining an invasive blood sample, and each test has significant limitations that restrict its utility.

In new research published in Nature Communications, Yale School of Public Health epidemiologist Dr. Sunil Parikh, MD, MPH, and colleagues from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and Cameroon present a new noninvasive test that could dramatically alter the global malaria testing landscape by providing reliable, safe, and sensitive testing to low- and middle-income countries that have been plagued by the deadly mosquito-borne disease.

Best of all, the new test can detect malaria without taking a single drop of blood.

The test is performed using a device called a Cytophone that applies targeted lasers and ultrasound to detect malaria-infected cells circulating in the bloodstream, said Dr. Jillian N. Armstrong, a former PhD student in Parikh’s lab and one of the study’s lead authors. About the size of a table-top printer, the Cytophone prototype uses photoacoustic technology that can determine whether infection is present within minutes via a small noninvasive probe that is placed on the back of a person’s hand above a targeted vein.

Article outro

Previous Article
Cities are Unprepared for Climate Change
Next Article
PFAS Toxicity: Study Suggests Cancer Cell Migration

Explore the Issue

Issue Contents

Features
YSPH Steps into the Future
YSPH Celebrates Its Independence at First-Ever State of the School Address
Shared Humanity Podcast Addresses Gun Violence
Leaders in Public Health Dean’s Speaker Series
New Program Helps Students Listen with Compassion
Humanitarian Research Lab
Elm City Health
Leaning into Data Science & Data Equity
Health & Veritas Podcast
Dean’s Message
Linking Science & Society Makes Public Health Foundational to Every Community
Advances
Cities are Unprepared for Climate Change
Noninvasive Malaria Test Could Be a Global Game Changer
PFAS Toxicity: Study Suggests Cancer Cell Migration
Chemical Additives Shown To Be in 'Non-Menthol' Cigarettes
Maternal Vaccination During Pregnancy
Voices
School Community Members Respond to the State of the School
Students
Students Discuss the Future of Public Health
Alumni
Welcome from Alumni Association President Kathe Fox
A Gift From Indra Nooyi and Raj Nooyi Will Help Train Tomorrow's Public Health Leaders
YSPH Receives Major Gift to Support Emerging Health Challenges
Ted Witek is YSPH's Distinguished Alumnus for 2024
Alumnifire
Alumni News - Fall 2024
In Memoriam
In Memoriam - Fall 2024
School Notes
Breaking Boundaries: Remembering Dr. Gregory Tignor
Data Equity Conference
Follow Our Historic Timeline
Awards & Honors
Awards & Honors Fall 2024

Noninvasive Malaria Tests

Learn more about the new malaria test and the research being conducted at YSPH

Read More

Explore More

Featured in this article