 Every year around 2.8 million new needs die and most of these deaths are occurring in your research studies due to largely preventable causes and could be averted to a timely attention and recovery. The WHO has established seven key dangerous signs in the field of superannuation and makes recognition of which puts in place. That's why I've created a tool that tasks shift meaningful assessment from trained health care workers to mothers. It consists of a low cost band that goes around the baby that measures respiratory rate and temperature and it is paired with a smartphone application that guides users to quality their dangerous sign assessments. The app guides the mother through putting on the band and connecting the band with the smartphone. And through the navigation of the app, the app finally tells the mother whether any dangerous sign has been detected at home. The smartphone relies solely on audio and visual use so any mother regarded something or others can use our system. So the phone will ask the mother for quality of the drug sign questions for example over here we have a question asking the mother if the baby has lethargy so the mother will hear the instruction and look at their baby and find out which of those two pictures best represent her baby. So after going through all those four quality of dangerous signs, the phone will teach the mom how to put the band around their baby's abdomen. After the mother does follow all the instructions, all those steps, the phone will then measure the respiratory rate and the body temperature. So while the baby is doing the body breathing, the sensor will pick up the respiratory rate and the body temperature and in the end it will send out some recommendations to mothers whether the phone has detected any dangerous signs.