UC students engineer medical solutions in Tonga
UC students engineer medical solutions in Tonga
For 10 weeks this summer, seven University of Canterbury (UC) students are going to be repairing life-saving medical equipment and engineering biomedical solutions in Tongan hospitals.
Sponsored by Callaghan Innovation summer research grants, the seven UC Biomedical Engineering students are learning how to repair medical devices on campus in Christchurch, before leaving for Tonga next week on 28 November.
UC Senior Lecturer in Mechanical and Biomedical Engineering Dr Debbie Munro is leading the initiative. Earlier this year, UC launched an annual biomedical engineering work experience in the Pacific Islands where students can combine their engineering skills with hands-on training for repairing critically needed hospital equipment.
“We've selected our interns and are in the midst of preparing them to leave for Tonga. We will be repairing hospital equipment for ten weeks while also developing the framework for a training programme for local people to continue the repair and maintenance work in Tonga,” Dr Munro says.
Dr Munro is the supervisor for the first five weeks and UC Electronics Technician Julian Phillips, who received a staff development award to attend, will take over supervision for the second half of the internship in January.
“I am super excited to be partnering with Callaghan Innovation, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare, and Take My Hands to send these students to Tonga for a global work experience where they can apply their biomedical engineering skills towards improving healthcare in developing countries,” Dr Munro says.
The seven UC Biomedical Engineering student interns are:
· Josie
Dixon
· Amy
Fellowes
· Rhys
Fitzgerald
· Manu
Prosser
· Sam Tullett (student
supervisor)
· Callum
Wilkie
· Frederick
Wright
Background
Hundreds of
developing countries depend on donated hospital equipment to
provide lifesaving care. This equipment, mostly used or near
its expiration date, comes from different manufacturers in
various states of repair. Often, the recipient country does
not have the resources to maintain the equipment, operate it
in a controlled environment or repair it. Since they
received it as a donation, they also cannot get technical
assistance from the manufacturer. The equipment can only be
used until it breaks down.
Engineering World Health (WH) and other philanthropic organisations have long been sending students to developing countries to repair hospital equipment. Last year, Dr Munro and the University of Canterbury sent two students to Uganda for summer 2018-2019 to participate in one of the EWH’s programmes.
This year,
UC’s new biomedical engineering work experience in the
Pacific Islands is sending seven students to Tonga. A
mechanical and biomedical engineer in Mechanical
Engineering, Dr Munro is also founder of the Biomedical
Engineering Club (UC BIOMED) at UC. UC BIOMED aims to
provide students studying Mechanical and Mechatronics with
an interest in Biomedical Engineering/Bioengineering with
the opportunities and skills to advance human health and
wellbeing through technological innovation.
Dr Munro was
one of the design engineers for the Jurassic Park Ride at
Universal Studios Hollywood, where you can view her mother
and baby ultrasaur, parasaur, and T-Rex. She also worked for
NASA and worked on the AX-5 spacesuit, the infrared
airplane-mounted telescope called SOFIA, and an animal
habitat that flew on the Space Shuttle. Her recent work has
been in orthopaedic implant design and biomechanics, with
projects including total hip replacement and measurement of
spinal fusion with implanted sensors. Dr Munro discussed
biomimicry and harnessing nature’s innovation on RNZ
earlier this year (listen
to her interview
here).