Safety

Phoenix firm develops device to detect bioterror agents

Emergency Management Alert, January 20, 2004

Phoenix-based Ribomed Biotechnologies landed a multimillion-dollar contract to build a handheld device to detect bioterror agents such as anthrax and smallpox, the Business Journal of Phoenix reports.

Northrop Grumman Corp. will build the device based on Ribomed's technology. The device is designed to detect the presence of two or three potential pathogenic targets at the same time, without the need for additional instruments or laboratory analysis.

Ribomed will receive more than $3 million from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency for the first year of what is expected to be a three-and-a-half-year project. The device would be a portable box that can be installed in hospitals, airports, schools, and military bases, screening the air for possible infectious agents.

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