Health Innovation Lab: Accelerating Innovation on Frontlines of COVID Pandemic

As COVID-19 continues to grow in our communities, hospitals are facing a severe shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE). Nurses are on the front lines of caring for patients and cannot provide their best care without PPE. Facing this severe shortage, many 色控传媒 health care practitioners have come up with ideas to help continue safe care to patients. Enter the Health Innovation Lab. The Lab has become an accelerator for people to conceptualize, prototype and test ideas and products. It鈥檚 a safe space for inventors to create and recreate ideas. In this time, that means that an idea can go from concept to production in a matter of days.
, is the Lab鈥檚 Director and he recently joined 色控传媒鈥檚 COVID-19 Engineering Response Team, created to review and test ideas. Shaw knew the Lab was the perfect space for innovators to test their ideas. He鈥檚 made the space available for all ideas designed to provide care during this pandemic.
鈥淚t is our civic duty to offer assistance to all of the healthcare professionals working on the frontlines,鈥 says Shaw. 鈥淭he Lab is an accelerator to ideas being produced by our colleagues across the University and Health System.鈥
One of these ideas is a 3D Printed Face Shield designed by individuals with the Pratt School of Engineering. Answering the call to produce more than 9,000 face shields for 色控传媒鈥檚 medical staff, Pratt engineers designed a prototype face shield, however once designed, they needed to test the product.
鈥淭he Health Innovation Lab is a perfect place for testing products for patient care,鈥 says Shaw. 鈥淐urrently, health care professionals are already maxed out on the frontlines and do not have time to step away to test these products. Product designers are able to tap into the experience of our faculty and graduate nursing students, who are licensed nurses, for feedback.鈥
DUSON's PhD and Nurse Anesthesia students, many of whom have been practicing nurses in 色控传媒 University Health System and who are trained in intensive care settings, volunteered for the face shield testing using various scenario simulations. The feedback from the participants allowed the Engineering team to continue with the process and meet a need on the front lines.
The Health Innovation Lab is also in the process of helping a physician with the School of Medicine in testing isolation bed tents that would assist health care professionals on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic. The bed tent is still in the very early stages, but School of Graduate Nursing students and faculty are already assisting with feedback and testing.
The Lab isn鈥檛 new to this though. Since its founding in 2017, the Lab has been the hub for other innovative projects to improve patient care. TRINA, the telerobotic intelligent nursing assistant, is a remote-controlled robot that could be used to perform common nursing duties in hazardous clinical environments.
Forward-thinking collaborative innovation is the ultimate goal of the lab, and during a crisis such as COVID-19, it鈥檚 the perfect place for teams 鈥 nurses, engineers, and physicians to come together to test ideas and care models that will improve patient care as well as care for those working on the frontlines across the street from the School of Nursing.