 The problem with dengue diagnosis in the Philippines is access. Access to allow Filipino patients to be able to be diagnosed at an early stage where much of the intervention can be done to save lives. Unfortunately, technologies that we utilize at such high cost doesn't have the significant sensitivity and specificity to allow early diagnosis. What happens? They get admitted even if they don't need to be because doctors will wait for the confirmatory testing later. What happens? It increases the hospitalization cost of the marginalized community who are the most vulnerable population with this disease. The lab in the MAG project is a Filipino-based technology that allows for the early detection of dengue infections between zero to five days of illness with very high sensitivity and specificity. It allows clinician to determine whether do I have dengue that's green color or do I not have dengue that's no green color. The word is simplicity because as a clinician the only important information is do I have it or not. The lab in the MAG project is a very important special program of the National Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology and the Philippine Genome Center to provide technologies that can be brought down to the grassroots level for early detections to save lives among patients with dengue infection. It's called lab in the MAG. The reason for that is it's about the size of a MAG. It's called a lab because it doesn't only detects dengue but it can still be used for other infectious disease targets such as the sick of virus, chikungunya, salmonella, tuberculosis, influenza, and cystosomiasis. This technology is developed by Filipino scientists for the Filipino people. Our biotech industry is at its infancy stages and is very much willing to learn how to walk at the global community. If you cater to our Filipino-based technology then you believe in our vision to bring it all the way to the grassroots level just like what other countries did to their own technology. Hoping and praying that we serve more, we do more for this country. Thank you.