Breast cancer detection bra will never see the light of day thanks to the deadly mammogram racket
by: Vicki Batts
NaturalNews.com
Friday, May 05, 2017
Eighteen-year-old Julian Rios Cantu, an engineering student from Monterrey, Mexico, recently made headlines for his cancer-detecting bra, known as EVA. Cantu stole the show at the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards and walked away with the top prize for his outstanding device.
The bra is equipped with 200 biosensors that monitor breast shape, temperature and weight, as well as “map” the surface of the breast. According to Rios Cantu, the bra only needs to be worn for about one hour per week to do its job, and it was specifically designed to help women with a genetic predisposition for breast cancer.
Rios Cantu says he was inspired by his mother’s struggles with breast cancer. Together with three friends, he created the device for his tech company, Higia Technologies. “EVA is a network of biosensors that covers the woman’s breast, takes the temperature data, analyzes them, and sends the information to an application or any computer,” he explained. The young inventor says that when there is a malformation or tumor in the breast, there is a change in blood flow and temperature that can be easily detected by the device.
Rios Cantu took home a whopping $20,000 for his groundbreaking cancer-detecting bra, and he beat out 13 other young student entrepreneurs from across the globe — but whether or not his device will make it to the marketplace is another matter.
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