The SteadiSpoon™ story: How a grandmother s inspiration is driving SMU student entrepreneurs sciencex.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sciencex.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
After his grandmother was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, Raleigh Dewan had witnessed the debilitating hand tremors that would not allow her to eat without spilling food everywhere. Now, SMU student partners Dewan and Mason Morland, and Emily Javedan, a Johns Hopkins student, are walking a creative and compassionate path as collaborators in a medical-tech startup named for its core product – SteadiSpoon™. It’s a self-stabilizing eating utensil that allows people suffering from disorders that cause shaking – such as Parkinson’s and essential tremors – to regain their ability to feed themselves with ease and dignity. <br/><br/>
story. we disrupted the plot, we have the device and we killed al quso. the one person out there, the ombmaker. technique. the technology idea. that created the underwear bomb, created the cargo plane bombs, in the printer cartridges, probably behind this wunchts most wanted man? definitely top three. he knows it and is training other individuals on his bombmaking techniques. because he thinks his days are numbered. thank you as always. up next, will voters ban same-sex marriage in north carolina today? embedded into the constitution? we re going to talk with retiring governor bev perdue about the referendum plus all the other stuff going on. will they regret holding their convention there? and ron paul, quietly wrestling delegates away from mitt romney, and by the way, he s also secretly becoming mitt romney s