Purdue University College of Engineering and Indiana University School of Medicine are launching a new educational and research partnership to develop novel technological solutions for pressing health care problems.
While the two institutions have collaborated for decades, the new Engineering-Medicine partnership formalizes the relationship and represents a long-term commitment to meld the institutions’ complementary expertise.
“The marriage of medicine and engineering is essential to developing the most advanced diagnostics and devices to treat patients,” said Dr. Jay L. Hess, dean of IU School of Medicine and IU’s executive vice president for university clinical affairs. “This partnership leverages existing expertise, optimizes public resources and positions Indiana to be a leader in the development of technologies that transform health.”
“Medicine is key to the future of engineering, with biomedical engineering front and center but important roles as well for nearly all engineering disciplines," said Mung Chiang, the John A. Edwardson Dean of the College of Engineering at Purdue. “We are grateful for our long, productive relationship with IU School of Medicine, including our ongoing MD/Ph.D. program. Our collaboration is now strengthened with the simultaneous launch of multiple new programs that will help elevate engineering-medicine synergy through cross-disciplinary education, research and innovation.”
The partnership:
The new programs build on and strengthen existing educational and research collaborations, including a highly selective MD/Ph.D. program in biomedical engineering. IU and Purdue are partners in the Indiana Clinical Translational and Sciences Institute, and IU School of Medicine and Purdue College of Engineering faculty members are collaborating on about 50 research projects in various stages of research and development, clinical trials and clinical practice.
Recent exemplars include a new Type 1 diabetes therapy that shows promise for long-term reversal in both humans and dogs and a new imaging technique that provides a detailed 3D image of the brain with important implications for studying Alzheimer’s disease.
“Whether we are developing new tests to diagnose cancer at earlier stages, improving surgical devices, or seeking ways to regrow damaged organs, we need the best minds from many disciplines working together for the benefit of patients,” said Dr. Anantha Shekhar, executive associate dean for research affairs at IU School of Medicine and director of the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute. “We are fortunate to have such strong programs in medicine and engineering in Indiana, and we feel confident that our joint efforts will strengthen the state’s critical life sciences sector.”
Dean Chiang added, “Through the expanded partnership, our goal is to broaden Purdue Engineering’s impact on health to match our contributions in many other technological realms, such as space exploration. The now enhanced collaboration with IU School of Medicine represents yet another Purdue ‘Giant Leap’ forward.”