| Literature DB >> 20387116 |
Maria Oden1, Yvette Mirabal, Marc Epstein, Rebecca Richards-Kortum.
Abstract
Recent reports have highlighted the need for educational programs to prepare students for careers developing and disseminating new interventions that improve global public health. Because of its multi-disciplinary, design-centered nature, the field of Biomedical Engineering can play an important role in meeting this challenge. This article describes a new program at Rice University to give undergraduate students from all disciplines a broad background in bioengineering and global health and provides an initial assessment of program impact. Working in partnership with health care providers in developing countries, students in the Beyond Traditional Borders (BTB) initiative learn about health challenges of the poor and put this knowledge to work immediately, using the engineering design process as a framework to formulate solutions to complex global health challenges. Beginning with a freshman design project and continuing through a capstone senior design course, the BTB curriculum uses challenges provided by partners in the developing world to teach students to integrate perspectives from multiple disciplines, and to develop leadership, communication, and teamwork skills. Exceptional students implement their designs under the guidance of clinicians through summer international internships. Since 2006, 333 students have designed more than 40 technologies and educational programs; 28 have been implemented in sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, southeast Asia, and the United States. More than 18,000 people have benefited from these designs. 95% of alumni who completed an international internship reported that participation in the program changed or strengthened their career plans to include a focus on global health medicine, research, and/or policy. Empowering students to use bioengineering design to address real problems is an effective way to teach the new generation of leaders needed to solve global health challenges.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20387116 PMCID: PMC2914280 DOI: 10.1007/s10439-010-0036-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Biomed Eng ISSN: 0090-6964 Impact factor: 3.934
Description of global health technologies curriculum
| Student selection criteria: | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| • The program is open to students in all majors; any student at the university is eligible to begin the course sequence | |||
| Learning outcomes of the global health technologies program: | |||
| • Students will learn to solve real global health challenges using the engineering design process | |||
| Global health technologies courses and learning outcomes | |||
| Course name | Faculty | Course description | Learning outcomes |
| Bioengineering & World Health | Bioengineering | This course is structured around four questions |
|
| (1) What are the problems in health today, & how these differ in developing & developed countries? | |||
| (2) Who pays to solve problems in health care? | |||
| (3) How can we use technology to solve world-health problems? | |||
| (4) How do technologies move from bench to bedside? | |||
| Appropriate Design for Global Health | Bioengineering | A semester long introductory design course where multi-disciplinary teams of students from different disciplines work together to design solutions to a global health challenge contributed by an international partner |
|
| Medical Sociology | Sociology | Course explores the relationship between social factors and health, illness, and mortality |
|
| -or- | |||
| Human Factors & Ergonomics | Psychology | Application of principles of psychology & human performance to the design of modern systems | Design of physical & computer systems to accommodate physical, perceptual and cognitive limitations of users |
| -or- | |||
| Metabolic Engineering for Global Health | Biochemistry & Cell Biology | Course addresses problems in global health that can be addressed by metabolic engineering technologies applied to nutrition, pharmaceutical & public health problems | Biochemical pathways; molecular biology tools and genetic engineering for ME; nutritional molecules; & pharmaceuticals for global health |
| Global Health Design Challenges I | Bioengineering | A year-long capstone design course where multi-disciplinary teams, mentored by interdisciplinary faculty teams, work to develop a solution to a real-world international health challenge. New technologies are developed with reference to both the societal and scientific issues associated with the global health challenge, such as design for universal use |
|
| Global Health Design Challenges II | Bioengineering | ||
| Humanities/Social Sciences Elective | Various | Students select from elective options in the following areas: Anthropology, Economics, English, Kinesiology, History, Philosophy, Psychology, Religious Studies, Sociology | Students select a course that will broaden their perspective on global health issues from a specific humanities or social sciences point of view |
| Science/Engineering Elective | Various | Students select from elective options in the following areas: Bioengineering, Biochemistry & Cell Biology, Civil & Environmental Engineering, Chemistry, Environmental Studies, Statistics | Students select a course that will broaden their perspective on global health issues from a specific science or engineering point of view |
FIGURE 1Teams of students collaborate to use the engineering design process to evaluate problems, design, and implement solutions. Over several years, 13 students designed and refined a Diagnostic Lab-in-a-Backpack to improve health care in rural settings served by medical brigade teams. The teams cycled through the design process in several rounds, as shown above, improving and refining the pack each time
Example design projects in the rice university global health technologies minor
| Global health technologies | |
|---|---|
| Pictorial Dosing Guides | Students designed an interactive software program to produce a pictorial guide to help patients adhere to a complex daily anti-HIV drug regimen. The program was tested and implemented in a pediatric AIDS clinic in Botswana. Another team developed medication dosing guides for a health clinic in a low resource immigrant clinic in Houston |
| Medication Adherence Measurement | Students designed a method for pharmacists to accurately assess a patient’s adherence to their HIV treatment program by quickly measuring how much medication has been used between clinic visits. The method was implemented in Lesotho and Swaziland. The system was also adapted to rapidly dispense medications |
| Medicine Dosing Device | A team of students designed an easy-to-manufacture syringe insert to provide accurate doses of liquid medicine for patients who are unable to accurately measure prescribed doses. A patent application has been filed and field testing will occur Summer 2010 |
| Low-Power Medicine Refrigeration Device | Students designed a portable refrigeration device to keep medicines cool with minimal power requirements. We are working with the Houston Public Health Department to use the device in city ambulances. The project received a Houston Society for Engineering in Medicine and Biology (HSEMB) Student Design Showcase Second Place Award 2007. A patent application has been filed |
| IV Fluid Production System | Students designed a portable IV fluid production system that can take clean water and produce sterile IV fluid. The project received a NASA Texas Space Grant Consortium (TSGC) Presentation Award 2006–2007 |
| Diagnostic Lab-in-a Backpack and Backpack Suite | Students designed a portable diagnostic lab in a backpack for health care workers to carry essential diagnostic equipment to remote areas. The backpack was field tested by physicians in Honduras, Nicaragua, Ecuador, Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Haiti, Peru, Tanzania, Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Swaziland, and Myanmar. Subsequently, additional teams of students designed field tested backpacks for the following specialized uses: OB/GYN, Community Health Officer, Dental, and Eye Care Packs |
| IV Drip Monitor | Students designed a battery powered, clip-on IV drip monitor to display, monitor and control the flow rate of IV fluids from gravity fed IV bags to avoid over hydration—particularly in pediatric patients for use in a government hospital in Lilongwe, Malawi. The project won second Place Student Design Project, HSEMB in February 2008 |
| Portable Optical Immunoassay System | Students built a portable tool that can detect disease in whole blood without requiring the expensive and technology intensive processing that is normally associated with ELISA immunoassays. This device uses nanoshell technology and relatively inexpensive optical components. This project received the Top Design Project Award, NASA TSGC Fall 2007 and Spring 2008 |
| Low-cost Phototherapy Lights | Students designed a low-cost, LED based set of phototherapy lights to treat neonatal jaundice for incubators in the neonatal intensive care unit at the Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. Sixteen sets of phototherapy lights have been provided to hospitals in Malawi, Lesotho, Swaziland, and Nicaragua |
| Portable Low Power Pulse Oximeter | Students designed a portable pulse oximeter that requires minimal power, works in pediatric patients and can be stored by a physician as a personal tool for use in a government hospital in Gabarone, Botswana. The team won first Place Student Design Project, HSEMB in February 2008 |
| Portable Field Microscope | A student designed, prototyped, and successfully validated a battery-powered fluorescence microscope against conventional microscopes for the detection of tuberculosis and malaria in point-of-care settings. This project won the Rice School of Engineering Best Design Project of 2008–2009 |
| Warming Crib | Students modified an existing warming crib used in Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi to incorporate safety features such as temperature regulation and standardized electronic components. Seven warming cribs are being evaluated at hospitals in Lesotho, Malawi, Swaziland, and Nicaragua |
| Oxygen Sensor and Flowmeter | Students designed a low-cost battery-operated device for the measurement of oxygen concentration and flowrate from available oxygen concentrators or tanks in clinic hospitals. The oxygen sensor and flowmeter is currently undergoing field testing at Galmi Hospital in Niger, as well as hospitals in Lesotho and Malawi |
Criteria for successful design challenges
| Global health design project decision matrix | (insert project name here) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Weight (%) | Rating (on a scale of 0 to 5) | Score (wt × rating) | |
| Step 1: Is a commercially available, appropriate solution already available? | |||
|
| |||
| Ratings Categories: 0 = n/a, 1 = poor, 2 = fair, 3 = average, 4 = good, 5 = excellent | |||
| Design project factors | |||
| Alignment with significant community need | 15 | 0 | |
| Alignment with recognized global healthcare/education challenge | 15 | 0 | |
| Appropriate level of difficulty for undergraduate students | 15 | 0 | |
| Appropriate expertise & resources are available to support project development & prototyping | 15 | 0 | |
| Realistic project & prototype completion/advancement within 1–2 semesters | 10 | 0 | |
| For potential target communities | |||
| Clear understanding of current practices to address need | 10 | 0 | |
| Clear understanding of current difficulty/bottlenecks to meeting the need | 10 | 0 | |
| Clear understanding of new solution constraints (i.e., infrastructural, cultural, environmental) | 10 | 0 | |
| Total (out of 5) | 0 | ||
| Development & implementation factors | |||
| Quality/Responsiveness of Houston-based Mentor(s) | 15 | 0 | |
| Quality/Responsiveness of On-site Mentor(s) | 15 | 0 | |
| Quality of On-site Clinic/Institution/School (e.g., facilities & staff) | 15 | 0 | |
| Local Interest in/Commitment to Project Implementation | 15 | 0 | |
| Project Scale-up Potential in the community | 10 | 0 | |
| Project Impact Potential in the community | 10 | 0 | |
| Scale-up/Impact Potential at the national level | 10 | 0 | |
| Scale-up/Impact Potential at the international level | 10 | 0 | |
| Total (out of 5) | 0 | ||
| Overall score (out of 10) | 0 | ||
FIGURE 2(Top) Numbers of students participating in the global health technologies program at Rice University over time. (Bottom) Numbers of clients served by design projects in the global health technologies program at Rice University over time
FIGURE 3Prototype battery powered IV drip monitor
FIGURE 4Solutions for accurate dosing of liquid medications. Dosing pump shown on left and syringe clip shown on right
Student evaluation of micro-enterprise training course
| Activity | Average student ranking scale of 1 (low) to 5 (high) |
|---|---|
| Teamwork and leadership | 4.8 |
| Marketing exercise | 4.29 |
| Business plan development | 4.97 |
| Bookkeeping | 4.55 |
| Problem of the day | 4.32 |
| Selling flashlights | 4.52 |
| Guest lecture—Boliba savings and credit | 4.4 |
| Guest lecture—Telajane society | 4.36 |
| Market research trip | 4.55 |