Understanding and treating disease
Mechanical engineering researchers are developing new and innovative ways to improve health care.
Mechanical engineering researchers are developing new and innovative ways to improve health care.
Portable device can generate corrective lens prescriptions in areas with no optometry care.
With a product called SurgiBox, grad student Sally Miller hopes to make safe, clean surgery possible anywhere.
Dennis Orgill SM ’80, PhD ’83 applies mechanical engineering principles to the operating room.
Providing training and resources, MakerHealth helps nurses and doctors hack medical equipment to improve patient care.
Technologies named among the year's most significant innovations address health care, radar performance, aircraft collision avoidance, and 24-hour wide-area surveillance.
Collaboration with pharmaceutical giant will bring smart jet-injection device to market.
The 2017 Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics Career Achievement Award honors a pioneering biomedical engineer, scientist, professor, and cardiologist.
New venture launched by MIT will support “tough-tech” companies at work on transformative ideas that take time to commercialize.
Conceived at an MIT hackathon, system could reduce amputations, cut medical costs for diabetics.
MIT and other innovators design novel solutions for the battlefield, disaster sites, and other dangerous environments.
Simple-to-use, low-cost respiratory sensor enables measurement and tracking of personal metabolism.
Startup’s stress sensor tracks users’ unconscious responses to products and experiences.
MIT teams innovating in medical, education, environmental, and other fields split prizes totaling $95,000.
MIT senior will use Marshall Scholarship to work on devices that enhance mobility for the disabled.