19 results on '"Youseph, Yazdi"'
Search Results
2. The role of hackathon in education: Can hackathon improve health and medical education?
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Shaghayegh Haghjooy Javanmard, Youseph Yazdi, Mostafa Amini-Rarani, Mohammad Hossein Yarmohammadian, and Sanaz Monsef
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innovation process ,Entrepreneurship ,Knowledge management ,LC8-6691 ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Process (engineering) ,Innovation process ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Review Article ,entrepreneurship ,healthcare system ,Special aspects of education ,Education ,Educational approach ,hackathon ,Health care ,Health education ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,business ,Complex problems ,Healthcare system - Abstract
To develop the next generation of healthcare innovators, students at all levels of education should be trained and encouraged to employ innovative and entrepreneurial approaches to deal with complicated challenges of today's health system. Applying innovation and entrepreneurship training to solve complex problems and focus on solution design has recently become common in medical universities all over the world. This paper clarifies the role of hackathons as an innovative educational approach in healthcare education systems. We propose a process model concerned with organizing hackathon events in the healthcare education system. This model can be used in the academic and practical design of hackathons for innovation purposes.
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- 2021
3. A novel personal protective equipment coverall was rated higher than standard Ebola virus personal protective equipment in terms of comfort, mobility and perception of safety when tested by health care workers in Liberia and in a United States biocontainment unit
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Brian T. Garibaldi, Lauren Sauer, Marion Subah, Youseph Yazdi, Margaret Glancey, Laura Scavo, Allyson R. Nelson, Lisa L. Maragakis, Lindsay Elizabeth Litwin, Chandrakant Ruparelia, Patience Osei, Colby Wilkason, and Kathryn Shaw-Saliba
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Adult ,Male ,Epidemiology ,Health Personnel ,medicine.disease_cause ,Simulated patient ,Unit (housing) ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Infection control ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Personal Protective Equipment ,Personal protective equipment ,Aged ,0303 health sciences ,Ebola virus ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Middle Aged ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Liberia ,Biocontainment ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Risk perception ,Infectious Diseases ,Female ,Medical emergency ,business - Abstract
During the 2014-2016 Ebola virus epidemic, more than 500 health care workers (HCWs) died in spite of the use of personal protective equipment (PPE). The Johns Hopkins University Center for Bioengineering Innovation and Design (CBID) and Jhpiego, an international nongovernmental organization affiliate of Johns Hopkins, collaborated to create new PPE to improve the ease of the doffing process.HCWs in Liberia and a US biocontainment unit compared standard Médecins Sans Frontière PPE (PPE A) with the new PPE (PPE B). Participants wore each PPE ensemble while performing simulated patient care activities. Range of motion, time to doff, comfort, and perceived risk were measured.Overall, 100% of participants preferred PPE B over PPE A (P.0001); 98.1% of respondents would recommend PPE B for their home clinical unit (P.0001). There was a trend towards greater comfort in PPE B. HCWs at both sites felt more at risk in PPE A than PPE B (71.9% vs 25% in Liberia, P.0001; 100% vs 40% in the US biocontainment unit, P.0001).HCWs preferred a new PPE ensemble to Médecins Sans Frontière PPE for high-consequence pathogens. Further studies on the safety of this new PPE need to be conducted.
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- 2019
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4. Evaluation of Efficacy, Efficiency, and Cell Viability of a Novel Descemet Membrane Endothelial Keratoplasty Graft Preparation Device, DescePrep, in Nondiabetic and Diabetic Human Donor Corneas
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Sara A. Larson, Edward Ruppel, Christine Diaz, Dou Yueheng, Kendall Frank, Alexandra J. Berges, Darrell Lee, Youseph Yazdi, Benjamin T. Ostrander, Andy S. Ding, Kunal S. Parikh, Shannon Schweitzer, Juan Guerrero, Katherine D. Solley, Ailon Haileyesus, Tagide deCarvalho, and Sudeep Pramanik
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Descemet membrane ,Cell Survival ,Cell Count ,Efficiency ,Eye Banks ,Slit Lamp Microscopy ,Corneal Diseases ,Diabetes Complications ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ophthalmology ,Medicine ,Humans ,Viability assay ,Aged ,business.industry ,Significant difference ,Middle Aged ,eye diseases ,Cell loss ,Tissue Donors ,Staining ,Treatment Outcome ,chemistry ,SPECULAR MICROSCOPY ,Tissue and Organ Harvesting ,Trypan blue ,Female ,sense organs ,business ,Descemet Stripping Endothelial Keratoplasty - Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this study was to evaluate the safety, efficacy, and efficiency of a Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty (DMEK) graft preparation device, DescePrep, through measurement of graft viability, yield, and preparation time in both healthy and diabetic (high-risk) donor eyes. Methods Twenty nondiabetic and 10 diabetic donor corneas were processed using DescePrep, which standardizes the liquid bubble technique. Corneas were stained with trypan blue and then processed. Cell counts through specular microscopy, optical coherence tomography imaging, and slit-lamp analysis were used for the evaluation of graft separation and viability in 5 nondiabetic corneas. The remaining 25 corneas (15 nondiabetic and 10 diabetic) were evaluated for preparation success rate and processing time. Ten corneas (5 nondiabetic and 5 diabetic) were randomly selected for further evaluation of global cell loss through staining. Results Ninety-seven percent of corneas (29 of 30) were prepared successfully with DescePrep. The average preparation time was 2.83 ± 1.8 minutes. There was no significant difference in the time of preparation between the nondiabetic and diabetic groups (P = 0.077). The overall average cell death after processing was 7.9% ± 3.7% for all corneas. There was no significant difference in cell viability between diabetic and nondiabetic tissues after DescePrep processing (P = 0.769). Conclusions DescePrep is a new DMEK preparation technique that can process both nondiabetic and diabetic donor corneas at high yields in minutes. High-yield preparation of diabetic corneas may offer eye banks access to a larger donor , which is important because the demand for DMEK grafts continues to rise worldwide.
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- 2021
5. Ultra‐thin, high strength, antibiotic‐eluting sutures for prevention of ophthalmic infection
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Revaz Omiadze, Youseph Yazdi, Peter J. McDonnell, Justin Hanes, Laura M. Ensign, Richard Shi, Nicole M. Anders, Aditya Josyula, Ping He, and Kunal S. Parikh
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Research Report ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Antibiotics ,Rat model ,Biomedical Engineering ,Pharmaceutical Science ,RM1-950 ,Chemical engineering ,Bacterial colonization ,Suture (anatomy) ,Electrospun nanofibers ,medicine ,nanofiber ,levofloxacin ,eye drop ,medical device ,suture ,business.industry ,Research Reports ,Eye drop ,Surgery ,ophthalmology ,Antibiotic delivery ,drug delivery ,Drug delivery ,TP155-156 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,business ,TP248.13-248.65 ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Sutures are applied almost universally at the site of trauma or surgery, making them an ideal platform to modulate the local, postoperative biological response, and improve surgical outcomes. To date, the only globally marketed drug‐eluting sutures are coated with triclosan for antibacterial application in general surgery. Loading drug directly into the suture rather than coating the surface offers the potential to provide drug delivery functionality to microsurgical sutures and achieve sustained drug delivery without increasing suture thickness. However, conventional methods for drug incorporation directly into the suture adversely affect breaking strength. Thus, there are no market offerings for drug‐eluting sutures, drug‐coated, or otherwise, in ophthalmology, where very thin sutures are required. Sutures themselves help facilitate bacterial infection, and antibiotic eye drops are commonly prescribed to prevent infection after ocular surgeries. An antibiotic‐eluting suture may prevent bacterial colonization of sutures and preclude patient compliance issues with eye drops. We report twisting of hundreds of individual drug‐loaded, electrospun nanofibers into a single, ultra‐thin, multifilament suture capable of meeting both size and strength requirements for microsurgical ocular procedures. Nanofiber‐based polycaprolactone sutures demonstrated no loss in strength with loading of 8% levofloxacin, unlike monofilament sutures which lost more than 50% strength. Moreover, nanofiber‐based sutures retained strength with loading of a broad range of drugs, provided antibiotic delivery for 30 days in rat eyes, and prevented ocular infection in a rat model of bacterial keratitis.
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- 2020
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6. Intraoperative ultrasound to monitor spinal cord blood flow after spinal cord injury
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Erick M. Westbroek, Thomas Benassi, Guoliang Ying, Ian Suk, George Coles, Ana Ainechi, Zach Pennington, Youseph Yazdi, Sandeep Kambhampati, Yu Shrike Zhang, Amir Manbachi, Betty Tyler, Micah Belzberg, Bowen Jiang, Noah Gorelick, Smruti Mahapatra, Rong‐Rong Chai, Brian Y. Hwang, and Nicholas Theodore
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business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Ischemia ,Blood flow ,Spinal cord ,medicine.disease ,Spinal cord blood flow ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,Spinal decompression ,medicine ,business ,Perfusion ,Spinal cord injury - Abstract
Spinal cord injury (SCI) affects approximately 2.5 million people worldwide. The primary phase of SCI is initiated by mechanical trauma to the spinal cord, while the secondary phase involves the ensuing tissue swelling and ischemia that worsen tissue damage and functional outcome. Optimizing blood flow to the spinal cord after SCI can mitigate injury progression and improve outcome. Accurate, sensitive, real-time monitoring is critical to assessing the spinal cord perfusion status and optimizing management, particularly in those with injuries severe enough to require surgery. However, the complex anatomy of the spinal cord vasculature and surrounding structures present significant challenges to such a monitoring strategy. In this study, Doppler ultrasound was hypothesized to be a potential solution to detect and monitor spinal cord tissue perfusion in SCI patients who required spinal decompression and/or stabilization surgeries. This approach could provide real-time visual blood flow information and pulsatility of the spinal cord as biomarkers of tissue perfusion. Importantly, Doppler ultrasound could be readily integrated into the surgical workflow, because the spinal cord was exposed during surgery, thereby allowing easy access for Doppler deployment, while keeping the dura intact. Doppler ultrasound successfully measured blood flow in single and bifurcated microfluidic channels at physiologically relevant flow rates and dimensions in both in-vitro and in-vivo porcine SCI models. Furthermore, perfusion was quantified from the obtained images. Our results provide a promising and viable solution to intraoperatively assess and monitor blood flow at the SCI site to optimize tissue perfusion and improve functional recovery in SCI patients.
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- 2020
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7. Starting a Medical Technology Venture as a Young Academic Innovator or Student Entrepreneur
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Parastoo Khoshakhlagh, Yu Shrike Zhang, Philipp Walch, Robert H. Allen, Nao J. Gamo, Henry Brem, Charles Montague, Katlin Kreamer-Tonin, Nicholas J. Durr, Mark G. Luciano, Elizabeth A. Logsdon, Nicholas Theodore, Youseph Yazdi, Soumyadipta Acharya, and Amir Manbachi
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Technology ,Entrepreneurship ,Scientific career ,business.industry ,0206 medical engineering ,05 social sciences ,Biomedical Engineering ,Health technology ,02 engineering and technology ,Public relations ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Commercialization ,Power (social and political) ,Engineering management ,Equipment and Supplies ,Inventions ,Innovator ,0502 economics and business ,Humans ,Students ,Set (psychology) ,business ,050203 business & management - Abstract
Following the footprints of Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg, there has been a misconception that students are better off quitting their studies to bring to life their ideas, create jobs and monetize their inventions. Having historically transitioned from manpower to mind power, we live in one of the most rapidly changing times in human history. As a result, academic institutions that are supposed to be pioneers and educators of the next generations have started to realize that they need to adapt to a new system, and change their policies to be more flexible towards patent ownership and commercialization. There is an infrastructure being developed towards students starting their own businesses while continuing with their studies. This paper aims to provide an overview of the existing landscape, the exciting rewards as well as risks awaiting a student entrepreneur, the challenges of the present ecosystem, and questions to consider prior to embarking on such a journey. Various entities influencing the start-up environment are considered, specifically for the medical technology sector. These parties include but are not limited to: scientists, clinicians, investors, academic institutions and governments. A special focus will be set on the seemingly unbridgeable gap between founding a company and a scientific career.
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- 2017
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8. Correction to: Curricular Advancement of Biomedical Engineering Undergraduate Design Projects Beyond 1 Year: A Pilot Study
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Youseph Yazdi, Elizabeth A. Logsdon, Amir Manbachi, and Nicholas J. Durr
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Engineering ,business.industry ,Biomedical Engineering ,Engineering ethics ,business - Abstract
This erratum is to add author Nicholas J. Durr as a co-corresponding author.
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- 2019
9. Minimally invasive therapeutic ultrasound: Ultrasound-guided ultrasound ablation in neuro-oncology
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Micah Belzberg, Alan R. Cohen, Rajiv R. Iyer, Nao J. Gamo, Henry Brem, Alexander Perdomo-Pantoja, Mari L. Groves, Nitish V. Thakor, Kyle Morrison, Amir Manbachi, Kah Timothy Xiong, Mark G. Luciano, Francisco Chavez, Nicholas Theodore, Stephen Restaino, Smruti Mahapatra, Youseph Yazdi, and Betty Tyler
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Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neuro oncology ,Transducers ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Focused ultrasound ,Blood loss ,0103 physical sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,010301 acoustics ,Ultrasonography, Interventional ,010302 applied physics ,Brain Diseases ,Therapeutic ultrasound ,Phantoms, Imaging ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Equipment Design ,Brain pathologies ,Ablation ,Ultrasound guided ,High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound Ablation ,business ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Introduction To improve patient outcomes (eg, reducing blood loss and infection), practitioners have gravitated toward noninvasive and minimally invasive surgeries (MIS), which demand specialized toolkits. Focused ultrasound, for example, facilitates thermal ablation from a distance, thereby reducing injury to surrounding tissue. Focused ultrasound can often be performed noninvasively; however, it is more difficult to carry out in neuro-oncological tumors, as ultrasound is dramatically attenuated while propagating through the skull. This shortcoming has prompted exploration of MIS options for intracranial placement of focused ultrasound probes, such as within the BrainPath™ (NICO Corporation, Indianapolis, IN). Herein, we present the design, development, and in vitro testing of an image-guided, focused ultrasound prototype designed for use in MIS procedures. This probe can ablate neuro-oncological lesions despite its small size. Materials & Methods Preliminary prototypes were iteratively designed, built, and tested. The final prototype consisted of three 8-mm-diameter therapeutic elements guided by an imaging probe. Probe functionality was validated on a series of tissue-mimicking phantoms. Results Lesions were created in tissue-mimicking phantoms with average dimensions of 2.5 × 1.2 × 6.5 mm and 3.4 × 3.25 × 9.36 mm after 10- and 30-second sonification, respectively. 30 s sonification with 118 W power at 50% duty cycle generated a peak temperature of 68 °C. Each ablation was visualized in real time by the built-in imaging probe. Conclusion We developed and validated an ultrasound-guided focused ultrasound probe for use in MIS procedures. The dimensional constraints of the prototype were designed to reflect those of BrainPath trocars, which are MIS tools used to create atraumatic access to deep-seated brain pathologies.
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- 2020
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10. Support for UNRWA’s survival
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Karl Blanchet, Abbas El-Zein, Ana Langer, Miho Sato, Sawsan Abdulrahim, Kim Abouchacra, Rima Afifi, Vittorio Agnoletto, Hidechika Akashi, Mohamad Alameddine, Éimhín Ansbro, Vera Araújo-Soares, Nassim Assefi, Matt Baillie Smith, Marco Bardus, Jacqueline Bhabha, Espen Bjertness, Josephine Borghi, Joanna Busza, Melani Cammett, Oona Campbell, Jad Chaaban, Iain Chalmers, Francesco Checchi, Goodarz Danaei, Hassan Dhaini, Karin Diaconu, Ishac Diwan, Paula Dominguez-Salas, Elizabeth Dubois, Faysal El Kak, Eugenia Eng, Nir Eyal, Wafaie Fawzi, Gene Feder, Rika Fujiya, Shota Furukawa, Kiyoko Furusawa, Akane Futami, Aline Germani, Hala Ghattas, Rita Giacaman, Ryunosuke Goto, Liz Grant, Paul Gregg Greenough, Rima Habib, Amy Hagopian, Shakoor Hajat, Fabienne Hariga, Ayako Hatano, Alastair Hay, Gerd Holmboe-Ottesen, Sayaka Horiuchi, William Hsiao, Daniela Huber, Darryl Humble, Taizo Imano, Yosuke Inoue, Aya Ishizuka, Ruba Ismail, Rumi Iwata, Samer Jabbour, Diana Jamal, Zeina Jamaluddine, Masamine Jimba, Tamar Kabakian, Yasuhiko Kamiya, Evangelos Karademas, Kenichi Kashiwagi, Yasushi Katsuma, Miyuki Kinjo, Junko Kiriya, Akiko Kitamura, Margaret E Kruk, Kazumi Kubota, Jennifer Leaning, Mhoira Leng, Lana Logam, Jihad Makhoul, Akihisa Matsuno, Yoshimi Matsuo, David McCoy, Terry McGovern, Martin McKee, Barbara McPake, Nada Melhem, Anne Merriman, Susan Michie, Christopher Millett, Chiaki Mishima, Takashi Miyachi, Hiroaki Miyata, Rob Moodie, Mariko Morioka, Kim Mulholland, Ghina Mumtaz, Adrianna Murphy, Eiji Nagasawa, Kenichiro Nagata, Martine Najem Kteily, Haruyo Nakamura, Rima Nakkash, Makiko Nambu, Mica Nava, Erica L Nelson, Aiko Nishikida, Shuhei Nomura, Sayumi Nozaki, Iman Nuwayhid, Kate O'Donnell, Masaaki Ohashi, Kelli O'Laughlin, Jennifer Palmer, Preeti Patel, Ronak Patel, Phuong Pham, Harumi Quezada-Yamamoto, Sami Ramia, Salman Rawaf, May Rihani, Bayard Roberts, Leslie Roberts, Tilman A Ruff, Nadine Sahyoun, Haruka Sakamoto, Nisreen Salti, Motoya Sato, Richard Sennett, Tim Shallice, Peter Shannon, Suhail Shiekh, Kiho Shin, Abla M Sibai, Maia Sieverding, Neha Singh, Richard Sullivan, Takao Takahara, Tomoyuki Tanigawa, Hiroko Taniguchi, Adrienne Testa, Alban Thomas, Atsuro Tsutsumi, Manami Uechi, Akira Usuki, Sara Valente de Almeida, Sue Wareham, Graham Watt, Robert West, Peter Wigg, Carol Wigg, Daniel Wikler, Sophie Witter, Nasser Yassin, Youseph Yazdi, Yasue Yoshino, Aisha Yousafzai, John S Yudkin, Mohammad H Zaman, and Huda Zurayk
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Right of return ,L700 ,Economic growth ,Refugees ,L900 ,United Nations ,L400 ,Humanitarian aid ,business.industry ,Refugee ,Relief Work ,Homeland ,General Medicine ,11 Medical And Health Sciences ,Arabs ,B900 ,159 signatories ,Political science ,Statelessness ,General & Internal Medicine ,Agency (sociology) ,Humans ,business ,Functional illiteracy - Abstract
The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) provides life-saving humanitarian aid for 5·4 million Palestine refugees now entering their eighth decade of statelessness and conflict. About a third of Palestine refugees still live in 58 recognised camps. UNRWA operates 702 schools and 144 health centres, some of which are affected by the ongoing humanitarian disasters in Syria and the Gaza Strip. It has dramatically reduced the prevalence of infectious diseases, mortality, and illiteracy. Its social services include rebuilding infrastructure and homes that have been destroyed by conflict and providing cash assistance and micro-finance loans for Palestinians whose rights are curtailed and who are denied the right of return to their homeland.
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- 2018
11. Design Improvements for Personal Protective Equipment Used in Ebola and Other Epidemic Outbreaks
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Matthew Petney, Margaret Glancey, Patience Osei, Youseph Yazdi, Laura Scavo, William Alexander LeMay Patterson, Chandrakant Ruparelia, and Soumyadipta Acharya
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0301 basic medicine ,Operations research ,business.industry ,030106 microbiology ,Outbreak ,General Medicine ,Equipment Design ,Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola ,medicine.disease ,Disease Outbreaks ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical emergency ,business ,Epidemics ,Innovation ,Personal protective equipment ,Personal Protective Equipment - Abstract
We redesigned the personal protective equipment ensemble widely used during the 2014 Ebola outbreak into a relatively simpler and more versatile coverall and hood, to improve protection and usability for frontline workers treating patients in infectious disease outbreaks around the world.
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- 2017
12. Use of a design challenge to develop postural support devices for intermediate wheelchair users
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Deepti Tanuku, Nathaniel C. Moller, Youseph Yazdi, Brenda Onguti, Shannon Egan, Elizabeth J. Himelfarb Hurwitz, Eva Bazant, and Anthony Gichangi
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Knowledge management ,Design Thinking ,Computer science ,Process (engineering) ,lcsh:Medicine ,Human-Centered Design ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Design thinking ,Wheelchair ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,lcsh:HT51-1595 ,Human–computer interaction ,0502 economics and business ,Innovation ,User-centered design ,Case Study ,business.industry ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,lcsh:R ,05 social sciences ,Rehabilitation ,Physical health ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Design Challenge ,lcsh:Communities. Classes. Races ,050211 marketing ,business ,050203 business & management - Abstract
The provision of an appropriate wheelchair, one that provides proper fit and postural support, promotes wheelchair users’ physical health and quality of life. Many wheelchair users have postural difficulties, requiring supplemental postural support devices for added trunk support. However, in many low- and middle-income settings, postural support devices are inaccessible, inappropriate or unaffordable. This article describes the use of the design challenge model, informed by a design thinking approach, to catalyse the development of an affordable, simple and robust postural support device for low- and middle-income countries. The article also illustrates how not-for-profit organisations can utilise design thinking and, in particular, the design challenge model to successfully support the development of innovative solutions to product or process challenges.
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- 2017
13. Voluntary medical male circumcision in resource-constrained settings
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Jason Reed, Youseph Yazdi, Valerian Kiggundu, Tigistu Adamu, Aaron A.R. Tobian, and Emmanuel Njeuhmeli
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Stapled anastomosis ,Dorsum ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,National Health Programs ,business.industry ,Urology ,Tissue adhesives ,Resource constrained ,HIV Infections ,Africa, Eastern ,medicine.disease ,Africa, Southern ,Surgery ,Foreskin ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Circumcision, Male ,Male circumcision ,SAFER ,medicine ,Health Resources ,Humans ,Medical emergency ,Hiv acquisition ,business - Abstract
Throughout East and Southern Africa, the WHO recommends voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) to reduce heterosexual HIV acquisition. Evidence has informed policy and the implementation of VMMC programmes in these countries. VMMC has been incorporated into the HIV prevention portfolio and more than 9 million VMMCs have been performed. Conventional surgical procedures consist of forceps-guided, dorsal slit or sleeve resection techniques. Devices are also becoming available that might help to accelerate the scale-up of adult VMMC. The ideal device should make VMMC easier, safer, faster, sutureless, inexpensive, less painful, require less infrastructure, be more acceptable to patients and should not require follow-up visits. Elastic collar compression devices cause vascular obstruction and necrosis of foreskin tissue and do not require sutures or injectable anaesthesia. Collar clamp devices compress the proximal part of the foreskin to reach haemostasis; the distal foreskin is removed, but the device remains and therefore no sutures are required. Newer techniques and designs, such as tissue adhesives and a circular cutter with stapled anastomosis, are improvements, but none of these methods have achieved all desirable characteristics. Further research, design and development are needed to address this gap to enable the expansion of the already successful VMMC programmes for HIV prevention.
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- 2015
14. Developing Innovative Clinicians and Biomedical Engineers
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Youseph Yazdi
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Education professional ,business.industry ,Epidemiology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Medicine ,Engineering ethics ,business ,Biomedical technology ,Curriculum - Published
- 2013
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15. A new model for graduate education and innovation in medical technology
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Youseph Yazdi and Soumyadipta Acharya
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Engineering ,business.industry ,Biomedical Engineering ,Health technology ,Equipment Design ,Business model ,Project-based learning ,Experiential learning ,Commercialization ,Engineering management ,Project planning ,Health care ,Humans ,Business plan ,Education, Graduate ,business - Abstract
We describe a new model of graduate education in bioengineering innovation and design- a year long Master’s degree program that educates engineers in the process of healthcare technology innovation for both advanced and low-resource global markets. Students are trained in an iterative “Spiral Innovation” approach that ensures early, staged, and repeated examination of all key elements of a successful medical device. This includes clinical immersion based problem identification and assessment (at Johns Hopkins Medicine and abroad), team based concept and business model development, and project planning based on iterative technical and business plan de-risking. The experiential, project based learning process is closely supported by several core courses in business, design, and engineering. Students in the program work on two team based projects, one focused on addressing healthcare needs in advanced markets and a second focused on low-resource settings. The program recently completed its fourth year of existence, and has graduated 61 students, who have continued on to industry or startups (one half), additional graduate education, or medical school (one third), or our own Global Health Innovation Fellowships. Over the 4 years, the program has sponsored 10 global health teams and 14 domestic/advanced market medtech teams, and launched 5 startups, of which 4 are still active. Projects have attracted over US$2.5M in follow-on awards and grants, that are supporting the continued development of over a dozen projects.
- Published
- 2013
16. Combined ultrasound and fluorescence spectroscopy for physico-chemical imaging of atherosclerosis
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Rebecca Richards-Kortum, S. Warren, M.J. Davis, A.L. Johnston, Ashley J. Welch, Youseph Yazdi, Sharon Thomsen, and Karl Pope
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Chemical imaging ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Materials science ,Monte Carlo method ,Biomedical Engineering ,Coronary Artery Disease ,In Vitro Techniques ,Fluorescence spectroscopy ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Aorta ,Ultrasonography ,business.industry ,Attenuation ,Ultrasound ,Models, Cardiovascular ,Fluorescence ,Elastin ,Reflection (mathematics) ,Spectrometry, Fluorescence ,Calibration ,Ultrasonic sensor ,Collagen ,business ,Monte Carlo Method - Abstract
Describes a combined ultrasonic and spectroscopic system for remotely obtaining physico-chemical images of normal arterial tissue and atherosclerotic plaque. Despite variations in detector-tissue separation, R, fluorescence powers corresponding to pixels in the image are converted to the same set of calibrated units using distance estimations from A-mode ultrasound reflection times. An empirical model, validated by Monte Carlo simulations of light propagation in tissue, is used to describe changes in fluorescence power as a function of R. Fluorescence spectra of normal and atherosclerotic human aorta obtained with this system are presented as a function of R. To compensate for changes in fluorescence power with R, the empirical model was used in each case to calculate the fluorescence power at a constant reference value of R(R/sub ref/=1.67 mm). Prior to compensation, tissue fluorescence power decreased more than a factor of two as R was increased from 2.5 to 5 mm. Following compensation. The fluorescence power varied less than /spl plusmn/10% of the average compensated peak. The chemical composition of each sample was determined by fitting its fluorescence spectrum (in calibrated units) to a model of tissue fluorescence incorporating structural protein and ceroid fluorescence, as well as structural protein and hemoglobin attenuation. Parameters of the fit were used to classify tissue type. Without compensation for distance variation, classification of tissue type was frequently incorrect; however, with compensation, predictive value was high. A 1D chemical image of a section of human aorta containing both normal and atherosclerotic regions obtained with this system is also presented. After compensation for detector-sample separation, tissue classifications along the cross-section closely resemble those obtained from histology. Regions of elevated ceroid concentration and intimal thickening are clearly observable in the resultant chemical image. The potential value of this type of system in the diagnosis and treatment of coronary artery disease is discussed. >
- Published
- 1995
17. Correction of refraction and other angle errors in beam tracking speed of sound estimations using multiple tracking transducers
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D. Mehta, Youseph Yazdi, David P. Shattuck, Jonathan Ophir, and G.W. Johnson
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Physics ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,business.industry ,Acoustics ,Transducers ,Biophysics ,Models, Theoretical ,Tracking (particle physics) ,Translation (geometry) ,Refraction ,Transducer ,Optics ,Position (vector) ,Speed of sound ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Degree (angle) ,Computer Simulation ,business ,Beam (structure) ,Ultrasonography - Abstract
The beam tracking approach to the estimation of the speed of sound has shown potential for making unbiased estimates in tissues. The speed of sound in a medium can be found from the arrival times of echoes as a function of the position of a tracking transducer. There is a problem in this approach if the angle between the direction of tracked beam and the direction of tracking translation is not zero due to refraction or other effects. An angle error as small as 1 degree would result in an error that is too large for diagnostic applications. A modified technique using three or more tracking transducers is described. This yields a corrected speed of sound estimate, and calculates the angle error. A simulation program has shown that this modified technique could indeed correct for the angle errors.
- Published
- 1989
18. Correlation artifacts in speed of sound estimation in scattering media
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Jonathan Ophir, Youseph Yazdi, D. Mehta, David P. Shattuck, and W. Johnson
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Physics ,Artifact (error) ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Scattering ,business.industry ,Acoustics ,Echo (computing) ,Transducers ,Biophysics ,Tracking (particle physics) ,Models, Structural ,Speckle pattern ,Transducer ,Optics ,Speed of sound ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Ultrasonic sensor ,Computer Simulation ,Ultrasonics ,business ,Mathematical Computing - Abstract
A recently described method for speed of sound estimation in tissues in pulse-echo mode involves reception of echoes generated by an ultrasonic pulse by means of a linearly tracking transducer. When the peaks of echo amplitudes are used as markers of arrival time, stairstep-like artifacts appear in the echo arrival time vs. transducer position plots. We postulate that these artifacts area consequence of the speckle phenomenon commonly encountered in ultrasonic imaging. To test this hypothesis, we report computer simulations and water tank experiments which demonstrate similarities between the behavior of the stairsteps and the properties of ultrasonic speckle. Additionally, equations describing the precision of the speed of sound estimation in terms of the second order statistical properties of the stairstep artifact are derived.
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- 1989
19. Refraction correction in beam tracking speed of sound estimations using multiple tracking transducers
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Jonathan Ophir, G.W. Johnson, Youseph Yazdi, David P. Shattuck, and D. Mehta
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Transducer ,Optics ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Acoustics ,Speed of sound ,Refraction (sound) ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,business ,Tracking (particle physics) ,Beam tracking - Published
- 1989
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