Over four million children die each year before their first month of life; 99% of them in developing countries. For those of you who joined us at SolidWorks World this year (or watched the videos), you’ll recall us recognizing local nonprofit Design That Matters for tackling this problem with an incubator designed specifically for the needs of developing nations.
Well, DtM isn’t resting on its laurels; the engineering and design students have taken on the next phase, providing a low-cost, low-maintenance respiration device for “thermoregulation” using CPAP (Continuous Positive Air Pressure). This will help premature and low birth weight infants with respiratory distress.
I’ll let you go to their website to learn more about the medical condition – I’ve already exceeded the limits of my medical know-how. So, let’s look at the winning design, as presented by a cross-functional team of students from the MIT school of Engineering, the Sloan Graduate school, and the Rhode Island School of Design.
I was lucky enough to attend their final presentation and was blown away by the team’s resourcefulness and problem-solving skills. Now, these are students from very different backgrounds and disciplines, all thrown together to attack this one problem against a strict deadline (the grading cycle). So seeing them learn how to work together was fascinating. But the design was cool. Most respirators cost from $2,500 - $9,000 and require lots of training and expensive parts.
This device (shown above) had one moving part, and made clever use of off-the-shelf products to save cost and complexity. It ended up coming in under $600, and did all the important things of the fancy machines. The user interface got the same attention as the device itself, with no words and simple “happy face” and "sad face" pictures for three lights. There were three design goals: affordability, intuitive UI, and the ability to be locally-maintained. The DtM students went three for three!
What do we get out of this? Thousands of lives saved, and the next generation of engineers and designers who are inspired to make this world a little better. What a great time to be an engineer!
That's a great story, thanks for sharing.
Devon
Posted by: Devon T. Sowell | June 17, 2009 at 12:31 PM
Good to know that people really care for others, and a really very touching story, i appreciate.
Posted by: Design college | September 17, 2009 at 05:41 AM