• Home
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Signup to receive updates
 Innovation | Startups | Funding | Tech Blog in Africa
NiRA Event
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Opportunities
  • Funding
  • Women Tech
  • Expert Column
  • Blockchain
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Opportunities
  • Funding
  • Women Tech
  • Expert Column
  • Blockchain
No Result
View All Result
Innovation | Startups | Funding | Tech Blog in Africa
No Result
View All Result
Home General

Canadian Startup, BlueDot Spotted Coronavirus before WHO’s Alert

by David Okelezo
6 years ago
in General
Reading Time: 2 mins read
A A
Coronavirus Face mask

Coronavirus Face mask

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

RelatedPosts

Meta Expands Safety Features for Nigerian Teens and Parents at Abuja Event

6 Ways Google and Gemini Are Changing How Fans Enjoy the 2026 World Cup

Paystack Targets Nigerian SMEs With New Support Programme

AWIEF Announces Pitch n Grow 2026

With the aid of artificial intelligence, a Canadian startup BlueDot had spotted the coronavirus which was first referred to as a case of abnormal pneumonia around the city of Wuhan, China and immediately reports the case.

The startup was quick to report the case nine (9) days earlier which prompted more research before the World Health Organisation (WHO) official release their report about the virus which has now been referred to as COVID-19

BlueDot is a startup that basically use human and artificial intelligence to spot infectious diseases and quickly report it thereby protecting the populace.

It is a proprietary software-as-a-service programmed to track, locate and conceptualize infectious disease spread.

In 2019, the startup received funding of $9.4 million and $7 million series A funding from Horizons Ventures and The Co-operators and BDC Capital’s Women in Technology Venture Fund respectively.

Around December 2019, Kamran Khan, founder and CEO of BlueDot and professor of medicine and public health at the University of Toronto, told CNBC Make It, how they never knew that the Covid-19 will become a major problem when it was first spotted.

“We didn’t know at that moment that this was going to become something of this magnitude”

What if this outbreak gets bigger than what we are already seeing? And what if it’s bigger than we think and project as it is right now? Khan pondered.

Questions like this prompted Kamran Khan to build up the startup BlueDot – “Spread knowledge faster than the diseases spread themselves,” he says.

Khan is an epidemiologist and a physician who never went to any business school or had experience in coding but through the experience, he gathered while treating patients in Toronto during the outbreak of the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), he was able to start BlueDot.

“Certainly, no one knew what SARS was until it literally showed up across major cities and hospitals,” Khan recalls.

He further states that “the mental and emotional fatigue of the SARs outbreak, which went on for six months, and killed a total of 774 people in 29 countries, including many of my fellow healthcare workers.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control, the disease cost an estimated $40 billion globally.

The startup process a lot of information all day long and relies on big data through machine learning and natural language processing to generate data from every source available e.g. official public health organizations, digital media, global airline ticketing data, livestock health reports and population demographics, etc.

The next goal of the startup is the plan to understand and have a clear data of how diseases spread to different parts of the world, and then determine the consequence.


Featured Image: express.co.uk


Don’t miss important articles during the week. Subscribe to cfamedia weekly newsletter for updates.

Join @techbuildafrica on Telegram
ShareTweetShareSendShare

Related Posts

Meta
General

Meta Expands Safety Features for Nigerian Teens and Parents at Abuja Event

World Cup
General

6 Ways Google and Gemini Are Changing How Fans Enjoy the 2026 World Cup

Paystack Small Business
General

Paystack Targets Nigerian SMEs With New Support Programme

Subscribe Us

Recent Posts

  • Beyond More Money: Why Africa Needs Smarter Capital Deployment
  • Meta Expands Safety Features for Nigerian Teens and Parents at Abuja Event
  • Grey Expands Cross-Border Offering With Four New Currency Payout Options
  • 6 Ways Google and Gemini Are Changing How Fans Enjoy the 2026 World Cup
  • Paystack Rolls Out Paystack Index, Bringing AI Into the Checkout Experience
  • WhatsApp Now Flags Unfamiliar Numbers Before You Open a Chat
  • After Years in Regulatory Limbo, Zimbabwe’s Crypto Industry Gets a Formal Rulebook
  • The Bigger Crypto Security Problem Isn’t Billion-Dollar Hacks Anymore
  • RoboCare Lands Investment From 216 Capital to Expand Its Farm Intelligence Platform Beyond Tunisia
  • Football Podcasts Gain Momentum Across Sub-Saharan Africa, Spotify Reveals

Telegram

Join @techbuildafrica on Telegram
Innovation | Startups | Funding | Tech Blog in Africa

© 2013-2024 techbuild.africa. All Rights Reserved.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Sitemap
  • Terms
  • Blockchain
  • CleanTech

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Hubs
  • Funding
  • WomenTech
  • CleanTech
  • Blockchain

© 2013-2024 techbuild.africa. All Rights Reserved.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Secret Link