Houston Methodist Academic Institute Annual Report 2021

Page 57

HOUSTON METHODIST ACADEMIC INSTITUTE |

Engineering Medicine (EnMed) The Nation’s First Training Program at the Convergence of Medicine and Engineering In August of 2019, Texas A&M University and Houston Methodist launched the EnMed program to instill a new generation of “physicianeers” with the skills to create innovative technological solutions that can transform patient care.

The EnMed program integrates medical education and research focused on innovation and entrepreneurship to empower future professionals with the clinical skills needed to diagnose and treat patients along with the engineering mindset to solve problems, invent new technologies and rapidly move these innovative ideas to practice inpatient care.

The EnMed program is housed in an 18-story office building acquired and renovated by Texas A&M. The building will be the focal point of the future Texas A&M Innovation Plaza, a 5-acre campus currently being constructed. The students have access to a simulation center, which occupies an entire floor, a makerspace so students can print 3D models for prototypes. Most of their didactic training will be in this building, but all wet anatomy labs happen at the Houston Methodist campus.

The 34 students who entered the EnMed program in 2020 came from a variety of educational backgrounds, including biological systems engineering, chemical engineering, material physics, mechanical engineering and mathematics. Many of these students are ready to embark on capstone projects, which are two-year mentored projects involving innovative research and technology development that directly address clinical or biomedical challenges. These projects will be conducted at Houston Methodist.

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Faculty and Research Development

0
page 59

Graduate Medical Education

4min
pages 60-64

Engineering Medicine (EnMed

1min
page 57

Neural Control of Organ Degeneration and Regeneration (NeuralCODR) Training Program

1min
page 58

Houston Methodist Hospital’s New Paula and Joseph C. “Rusty” Walter III Tower Offers the Most Advanced Treatments and Innovations Available

1min
page 53

Can Devices Provide A New Treatment Option for Glioblastoma?

2min
page 52

Houston Methodist Institute for Technology, Innovation & Education (MITIESM

1min
page 50

Novel Monoclonal Antibody Treatment Halts Tumor Growth in Deadly Ovarian and Pancreatic Cancers

2min
pages 48-49

Siemens Healthineers and Houston Methodist Imaging Innovation Hub Empowers Researchers to Push Boundaries

3min
pages 46-47

Expanding the RNAcore to Encompass the Entire Cycle of a Cure

3min
pages 44-45

Dissolvable Implants Enhance the Body’s Ability to Heal Broken Bones

1min
pages 36-37

Devising a Novel Combination Treatment for Aggressive Double-hit Lymphoma

0
page 43

Non-invasive Spinal Stimulation Enables Paralyzed People to Stand Unassisted

1min
pages 34-35

Houston Methodist and Rice University Launch Center for Translational Neural Prosthetics and Interfaces

4min
pages 32-33

Breast Cancer Survivors Find a Way to Maintain Healthy Lifestyles and Lose Weight on Their Phones

2min
page 30

The Ann Kimball and John W. Johnson Center for Cellular Therapeutics

1min
page 16

COVID-19 Spotlights Social Determinants of Health

3min
pages 24-25

Mobile App Improves Joint Replacement Surgery Outcomes

1min
page 31

Paula and Joseph C. “Rusty” Walter III

2min
pages 20-21

Jerold B. Katz Academy of Translational Research

2min
pages 22-23

Houston Methodist Researchers Step Up and Face the Challenges of COVID-19 Virus

4min
pages 26-27

The Fondren Food & Health Alliance and The Fondren Inflammation Collaboration

1min
page 17
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