To mark the 10-year anniversary of the NIBIB-led Concept to Clinic: Commercializing Innovation (C3i) program, we feature three innovators who participated in th
The National Institutes of Health and the higher education non-profit VentureWell have selected 10 winners and five honorable mentions of the Design by Biomedical Undergraduate Teams (DEBUT) Challenge, who are set to receive prizes totaling $145,000.
A team of biomedical engineering undergraduate students from the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering found a new way to balance the responsibility of birth control ownership between genders as their required senior capstone project.
What started off as three McCormick students’ biomedical engineering capstone project has become a potentially life-saving intervention for communities struggling with tuberculosis. First-year biomedical engineering graduate student Peter Kouassi (McCormick ’22), Isaac Tenga (McCormick ’22) and Shani Katz (McCormick ’22) have developed a new system to address the lack of rapid, safe and cost-effective tuberculosis.