Classroom to Clinic: Merging Education and Research to Efficiently Prototype Medical Devices

IEEE J Transl Eng Health Med. 2013 Jul 24:1:4700107. doi: 10.1109/JTEHM.2013.2271897. eCollection 2013.

Abstract

Innovation in patient care requires both clinical and technical skills, and this paper presents the methods and outcomes of a nine-year, clinical-academic collaboration to develop and evaluate new medical device technologies, while teaching mechanical engineering. Together, over the course of a single semester, seniors, graduate students, and clinicians conceive, design, build, and test proof-of-concept prototypes. Projects initiated in the course have generated intellectual property and peer-reviewed publications, stimulated further research, furthered student and clinician careers, and resulted in technology licenses and start-up ventures.

Keywords: Biomedical engineering education; mechanical design; mechatronics; medical devices.

Grants and funding

This work was supported in part by CIMIT under U.S. Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity Cooperative Agreement W81XWH-09-2-0001 with additional support from MIT Mechanical Engineering, Ximedica, Boston Scientific, Intuitive Surgical, National Instruments, Hoya, MIT Energy Initiative, Timken, and the Gordon-MIT Leadership Program, and the MIRROR project funded by the Fondazione Monte dei Paschi.