Theodore J. Swann
Papers
2
Total Citations
23
H-Index
2
About
Theodore J. Swann is a researcher whose work sits at the critical intersection of public health, diagnostics, and open-source laboratory automation. His primary research focus is on developing scalable, cost-effective strategies for infectious disease surveillance, with a particular emphasis on leveraging accessible technology to meet urgent epidemiological needs. Swann’s major contribution is the design and validation of a high-throughput, quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-qPCR) diagnostic protocol for SARS-CoV-2 that utilizes open-source pipetting robots. This work directly addressed the pandemic-era bottleneck of testing capacity by replacing expensive, proprietary liquid handlers with affordable, automated alternatives, making widespread saliva-based testing feasible for resource-limited settings. His most-cited paper, "Efficient SARS-CoV-2 Quantitative Reverse Transcriptase PCR Saliva Diagnostic Strategy utilizing Open-Source Pipetting Robots," has accumulated 16 citations, reflecting its practical impact on the field. By demonstrating that rigorous clinical diagnostics can be achieved with democratized hardware, Swann’s research provides a blueprint for future pandemic preparedness and underscores the power of open-source innovation in global health.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
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