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Applachia/Southeast Ohio : Innovation + Job News

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Volunteer effort to thwart child abuse leads to possible multimillion dollar business

A volunteer effort to help prevent child abuse was the starting point for a what could become a multi-million dollar business for David Allburn.

A retired Air Force engineer, Allburn, 70, worked in counter intelligence during the Vietnam War era, and founded the Safe Harbor Foundation to Prevent Child Sexual Abuse about 10 years ago in Glouster.  The organization required its volunteers to be fingerprinted, but reliable, affordable, convenient methods of fingerprinting were not readily available.

That led Allburn to invent one.  Originally set up as part of his non-profit group, the fingerprinting was identified as a commercially viable idea, and he received $10,000 in grant money from the state of Ohio Third Frontier and help from Ohio University’s business school to get the venture rolling in 2009.

Today, National Fingerprint, uses “self capture packs” that are administered in the field by a network of contracted civilians, often notaries, who collect dozens of fingerprints that are mailed overnight to National Fingerprint’s lab in Glouster, which then selects the highest quality prints to forward to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s lab for cross checking. 

The whole process takes just a couple of days, and costs an organization less than $300 per individual.  Previously, fingerprinting meant trips to a police station or similar official office.  It could then take weeks to get results.

“Our niche market is really VIPs who need quick, accurate fingerprinting,” says Allburn.  “We offer concierge service, so these executives don’t ever have to leave their office.  They can have results in just a couple of days.”

Many types of businesses that work with financial or government transactions require fingerprinting of each executive in the chain of command, says Allburn.  His fingerprint product is one of the only easy-to-use options for these applications.

Background check companies also distribute the packs so businesses can use them to help screen new hires or other workers.

Allburn says he expects $1 million in revenue in the next year, and foresees it as a $10 million business in the next five years in the fast growing security sector.  He has four employees now, but anticipates hiring a dozen more by the end of 2012.  These will be primarily lab technicians and will all be disabled veterans, he says.

Source: David Allburn, National Fingerprint
Writer: Val Prevish


First Biotech�s gene-creation technology could benefit medicine, agriculture, research

Athens-based startup First Biotech Inc. (FBTI) believes it’s found a better way to create new genes that could lead to new applications in medicine and other fields.

First Biotech produces and markets research reagents for a new smart DNA technology referred to as Unrestricted Mutagenesis and Cloning (URMAC). The technology was developed by the company’s founder, Louay Hallak. 

The technology replaces conventional subcloning techniques -- techniques that transfer a cloned DNA fragment from one vector to another -- with fast biochemical reactions that allow direct manipulation of large DNA sequences in an efficient, reliable and cost-effective way. The company has plans to establish a manufacturing and service operation in Ohio University’s Innovation Center.

FBTI, which registered as a C-corporation last year, is in the process of forming a management team in preparation for launch later this year.

“The main product,” says Hallak, “is fully developed and ready to go to market. We are starting with a professional team of experts in management, marketing and biotechnology . . . we will add new jobs as needed . . . FBTI will manufacture biochemical reagents, mainly for DNA mutagenesis and cloning,” Hallak says.

Hallak says the company’s new technique “will enable users to create new genes in shorter time, with high accuracy and less overall cost than the competition.”

URMAC has wide application in many fields, such as medicine. It can be used to create protein therapeutics and viral vectors; in research, it can “knock out” or change genes to help understand their function; and it can be used in agriculture, for crop engineering. 
 
FBTI has received pre-seed funding approval from TechGrowth Ohio, in addition to an earlier grant from TechColumbus. Hallak expects the new venture will achieve profitability within 12 to 18 months of launching.

Source: Louay Hallak, Founder, First Biotech Inc.
Writer: Patrick G. Mahoney

NanoLogix says new research moves company a step closer to fast detection of Strep in moms, newborns

Hubbard-based NanoLogix on Monday announced new research confirming the company's ability to detect and identify Group B streptococcus in four to six hours -- 12 to 18 times more quickly than traditional detection methods, it says.

NanoLogix, which is awaiting FDA approval for its BioNanoPore and BioNanoFilter Quick Test technology, says in a news release that the research moves the company another step closer to making the technology available to women and newborns who are especially susceptible to strep infections.

According to NanoLogix, speed is of the essence when detecting Group B strep in mothers and infants. The release cites Centers for Disease Control statistics showing "25 percent of pregnant women may be colonized with Group B Strep. If colonized mothers give birth before antibiotics can be administered, the bacteria can be passed to the newborn and cause life-threatening blood infections, such as meningitis, sepsis, pneumonia or even still birth."

The new study was conducted at the University of Texas Health Science Center and published in the American Journal of Perinatology. 

Begun more than 20 years ago as Infectech, the company for years focused on research and other endeavors, including alternative energy. Re-christened NanoLogix in 2005, the company quickly refocused on rapid detection testing.

Last year, the company signed a multi-year contract with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to develop rapid testing for bacterial threats to drinking water.

The company has also built a 2,800-square foot manufacturing facility in Hubbard to localize work being done elsewhere.

Source: NanoLogix

OU prof working on ways to understand those who cannot speak or move

Imagine how frustrating it would be if you could not let family members and friends know that you understood what they were saying to you.

That is the dilemma that many stroke and brain injury victims face each day.

Brooke Hallowell, a professor of communications sciences and disorders at Ohio University in Athens, is working to make it possible for medical professionals and communication therapists to assess a person's language comprehension even when the individual cannot speak or move.

She is working with Hans Kruse, professor of information and telecommunication systems, and LC Technologies to produce technology known as Eyetracking Comprehension Assessment System, or ECAS, that allows a clinician to evaluate a person's ability to understand questions or commands based on eye movement.

Twenty years in development, ECAS has just completed a phase I project with $700,000 in funding from the National Institutes for Health. The research is about to enter phase II and could be ready for commercial application within a few years, says Hallowell.

This technology could provide significant quality of life boosts for victims of stroke, brain injuries or individuals with congenital brain dysfunctions by allowing them to participate more fully in their treatment, to live at home instead of in an institution or to socialize more.

The system works by using infrared light to monitor eye movement and check for fixation on certain images shown on a screen while a clinician communicates questions or commands.

"When the eyes remain focused on a particular area you can measure comprehension," says Hallowell. "You have to have stable eye movement to see things."

Although eye tracking technology has been used in other areas, such as research on how healthy individuals perform tasks, such as driving, piloting a plane or using certain products, it has not been developed to help with victims of brain injuries before now.

"Knowing how much a person understands is critical for many things in their life," says Hallowell. "Now we can get a better picture of that."

Source: Brooke Hallowell, Ohio University
Writer: Val Prevish


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