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The newly emerging field of pediatric engineering: Innovation for our next generation
Author(s) -
Hirschhorn Matthew,
Garven Ellen E.,
Wells Jamie L.,
Stevens Randy,
Tchantchaleishvili Vakhtang,
Throckmorton Amy L.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
artificial organs
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.684
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1525-1594
pISSN - 0160-564X
DOI - 10.1111/aor.13973
Subject(s) - toolbox , biopsychosocial model , population , medicine , diversity (politics) , engineering ethics , psychology , computer science , engineering , psychiatry , political science , environmental health , law , programming language
Neonates, infants, and children have unique physiology and body surface areas that dramatically change during growth and development, and the substantial diversity of complicated pediatric illnesses and rare childhood diseases are distinct from the adult sphere. Unfortunately, medical innovation is generally constrained to retrofitting adult treatment strategies for this heterogeneous population. This conventional, but limited, approach ignores the dynamic biopsychosocial, growth, and developmental complexities that abound, as one progresses through this life cycle from newborn onward toward early adulthood. Forward‐thinking solutions are essential to advance the state‐of‐the‐art to address the challenges and unmet clinical needs that are uniquely presented by the pediatric population, and it has become obvious that newly trained engineers are essential for success. These unmet clinical needs and the necessity of new technical skills and expertise give rise to the emergence of an entirely new field of engineering and applied science: Pediatric Engineering. The field of Pediatric Engineering flips conventional wisdom that adult therapies can simply be scaled or successfully modified for children. It commandeers design to suit the specific needs of the child, while anticipating the dynamic growth and development into adulthood. We are growing a new pipeline of educated scientists and engineers who will have developed a unique toolbox of skills that they can use to tackle unmet clinical needs in global pediatric healthcare for years to come.

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