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Resumen de Biomedical engineering project based learning: Euro-african design school focused on medical devices

Arti Ahluwalia, Carmelo de Maria, Andrés Díaz Lantada, June Madete, Philippa Ngaju Makobore, Alice Ravizza, Licia di Pietro, Mannan Mridha, Juan Manuel Muñoz-Guijosa, Enrique Chacón Tanarro, Janno Torop

  • Biomedical engineering (BME) has the potential of transforming medical care towards universal healthcare by means ofthe democratization of medical technology. To this end, innovative holistic approaches and multidisciplinary teams, builtupon the gathering of international talent, should be encouraged within the medical industry. However, thesetransformations can only be accomplished if BME education also continuously evolves and focuses on the internationa-lization of students, the promotion of collaborative design strategies and the orientation towards context relevant medicalneeds. In this study we describe an international teaching-learning experience, the ‘‘UBORA (Swahili for ‘excellence’)Design School’’. During an intensive week of training and collaboration 39 engineering students lived through thecomplete development process for creating innovative open-source medical devices following the CDIO (‘‘conceive-design-implement-operate’’) approach and using the UBORA e-infrastructure as a co-design platform. Our post-schoolsurvey and analyses showed that this integral teaching-learning experience helped to promote professional skills and couldnurture the future generation of biomedical engineers, who could transform healthcare technology through collaborativedesign oriented to open source medical devices.


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