BME News

November 5, 2019

Innovation for Clinical Translation Fellows named

Eight Innovation for Clinical Translation (ICT) Fellows have been named for 2019-2020. The ICT Fellowship program is a key component of the expanding partnership between the Purdue College of Engineering and Indiana University School of Medicine. Doctoral engineering students are able to translate their work with innovative technologies from the lab to clinical practice.
September 26, 2019

George R. Wodicka appointed Co-Director of NIH-supported Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI)

George R. Wodicka was named the new Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI) co-director representing the Purdue University campus. The Dane A. Miller Head and Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Purdue has been involved with the Indiana CTSI from its inception, but his new role brings opportunities to expand his impact, starting with plans for a new Biomedical Devices Clinical Research Laboratory that will shrink the gap between discovery and implementation of noninvasive medical devices.
September 13, 2019

Inaugural Wheel Rise Event Set for Saturday

Weeks of planning, tireless dedication and inspired collaboration between Purdue Athletics and the College of Engineering will come to fruition this Saturday for the Wheel Rise Event in Holloway Gymnasium. This inaugural event, organized to promote and raise awareness for Paralympic sports, will take place from 2-5 p.m. prior to the football game against TCU at 7:30 p.m. Leony Boudreau, a junior at the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering and member of the Purdue women's basketball team, has been spearheading the effort.
September 12, 2019

Kim helps lay foundation for emerging mHealth technology in Africa

Young Kim, associate professor with the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering at Purdue University, is helping to lay the groundwork for emerging global mobile health (mHealth) technologies. mHealth includes the use of mobile and wireless devices (cellphones, tablets, etc.) to improve point-of-care diagnosis, health outcomes, health care services and health research.
September 9, 2019

Graduate students receive NSF fellowships for international research

Hannah Cebull and Sarah Libring, graduate students at the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering at Purdue University, have received NSF Institute of International Education-Graduate International Research Experiences (IIE-GIRE) Scholarships. IIE-GIRE is a fellowship program that offers funding to doctoral engineering students to conduct innovative research abroad for three to five months and to expand ties between Purdue and the host institution. Cebull and Libring will conduct their fellowship research during the spring 2020 semester.
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