Biomedical engineers design the medical technology to maintain and improve our quality of life. Our graduates work for pharmaceutical companies, hospitals, rehabilitation centers and biomedical research institutes.
We are addressing the dual challenges of patient wait times and exam room cleanliness, which often create bottlenecks in clinical workflows and consume valuable time and resources that could otherwise be dedicated to patient care.
Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) pose a critical challenge in clinical settings, leading to prolonged patient recovery times and increased healthcare costs. According to the CDC, approximately one in 31 hospital patients experiences at least one HAI on any given day.
In today鈥檚 fast-paced healthcare environment, there is a critical need for a device that reduces patient turnaround times while upholding the highest standards of exam room cleanliness and safety.
Our project aims to enhance the efficiency of cleaning exam room tables while maintaining or improving current sanitization levels. Additionally, our device will not only achieve this goal but also help reduce single-use waste in clinical settings.
With innovative medical solutions, team ATM is dedicated to enhancing patient safety and provider efficiency. Our flagship product, the Break Away Buddy, is designed to securely hold nasogastric (NG) tubes, preventing accidental or intentional removal by patients. By prioritizing safety, security, and provider time, our solution reduces complications, minimizes interruptions in care, and allows healthcare professionals to focus on what matters most鈥攄elivering exceptional patient outcomes.
SPONSOR: 成人头条 Diabetes and Endocrinology
SPONSOR: 成人头条 Diabetes and Endocrinology
Heterotopic Ossification (HO) is the random growth and calcification of bone in areas they don鈥檛 usually grow, such as soft tissues. After amputations, HO can form on the terminal end of the amputated bone and transform into a bone spur. A bone spur is a sharp boney point growing out of the bone due to friction, injury, or trauma. Bone spurs can be painful, and cause patients to get revision surgery or alterations done to their prosthetic sockets at the location of the bone spur. Revision surgery is not always an option for patients because of surgical risk factors such as age, neuropathy, diabetes, or infection. There are no current preventative biomedical devices that are used to prevent the growth of bone spurs. Our company, Visionaries in Biomedical Engineering (VIBE), aims to reduce the number of bone spurs by producing a novel titanium cap, that eliminates the formation of a bone spur all together. The innovative titanium cap is attached to the terminal end of the bone with bone cement during amputation surgery, cutting the time and cost of frequent maintenance needed with a bone spur. VIBE is currently focusing on the application of the VIBE Cap in lower-limb amputees, which are 65% of the amputations done per year, with plans to expand to upper-limb amputees in the future.
Plagiocephaly, specifically positional plagiocephaly, has increased since the 鈥淏ack-to-Sleep鈥 campaign of the 90s. We are re-designing an infant mattress to prevent the development of positional plagiocephaly. The mattress will have removable foam blocks with divots of different sizes to allow the head to grow into a normal shape while being sleep safe.
Emergency code scenarios are busy situations. In this high-stake and noisy environment, any number of things can be happening. For example, CPR is a commonly used technique that must be applied on the patient every second, generating a lot of motion and noise. Monitors can be blaring, and alerts can be contributing to the stressful scenario. Particularly, doctors and nurses can be trying to communicate with each other, but might not be able to catch everything the other is saying due to all the noise. Currently, a medical scribe is being used within these scenarios to note what is happening during a code response; however, the combination of all these factors makes it exceedingly difficult to accurately and reliably document everything that is going on and when they all take place. Our device, NoteBox, is designed to solve this issue. NoteBox can be placed anywhere on a code cart, a patient鈥檚 room, or the cab of an ambulance and is configured to take detailed, time-stamped notes on what was said during a medical emergency. NoteBox is capable of spotting high-risk instances of miscommunication by comparing what was said by one member of a team and noting substantial differences from what was said by another team member around that same time. Additionally, NoteBox allows one more medical professional to be available to respond quickly to the scenario, contributing their medical expertise towards the needs of the patient instead of focusing solely on generating a report.