As medical technology continues to cross the threshold into the 21st century, clinical engineers at UCSF are hacking the operating room by coming up with homegrown inventions to address problems that plague physicians and patients alike.
A team of researchers from UC San Francisco, Vanderbilt University Medical School (VUMC), and Silicon Kidney are among the winners of the “KidneyX: Redesign Dialysis” prize competition for their design of an innovative, implantable hemofilter dialysis system that would enable patients to safely and effectively treat kidney failure at home.
Stanford Children's Health announced the winners of the pediatric medical device development competition hosted by the UCSF-Stanford Pediatric Device Consortium (PDC). […] In a timed, Shark Tank–style presentation, 13 finalists from a total of 74 applicants pitched their pediatric device ideas—in various stages of development—to a panel of judges.
The UCSF Rosenman Institute interviewed UCSF-Stanford PDC PI, Michael Harrison, about his career in pediatric and fetal surgery and current research in device innovation.
Few medical devices are approved specifically for babies and children. An FDA grant to fund a collaboration between Stanford and UCSF for developing pediatric devices aims to fill the gap.