By: Tiffany Wong

McCormick
freshmen Max Willer, left, Patrick Foley, Aditya Kanesa-Thasan and Dan
Schuster designed "Tap-Tight Goggles," one student innovation for
special needs patients produced during school-required courses.
|
Every other weekday
morning, a patient named Joe swims in the 12th-floor pool of the
Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago. Having sustained a C6-C7 spinal
cord injury, Joe is unable to use his fingers and has limited movement
in his arms and triceps. In order to swim, he needs a special pair of
goggles that accommodate the lack of dexterity in his fingers. A
one-of-a-kind model, the Tap-Tight Goggles are equipped with an
overhead strap and ratchets that allow Joe to adjust the straps easily
using the palms of his hands.
Four freshmen enrolled in the Engineering Design and Communication
course sequence in the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences developed Joe's goggles. The goggles are just one example of
dozens of prototype technologies created by students in partnership
with the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago each year.
As freshmen, all engineering students are required to take the
two-quarter, two-credit sequence, in which they work in teams of four
to take on real-world design problems presented to them by individuals,
nonprofit organizations, entrepreneurs and companies.
"You treat your instructor like your boss, and you have a client who is
interested in your product," said McCormick freshman Regan Radcliffe,
who took part in developing Traba, a trapezoid-shaped adaptive bar that
allows people who use wheelchairs to exercise their abdominal muscles
independently.
During Fall and Winter Quarters, students work with patients of the
Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, one of the largest rehabilitation
hospitals in the nation and the home of the Feinberg School of
Medicine's Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.
Stroke survivors seek independence, said McCormick sophomore Jared
Wendorf, who worked on a team his freshman year developing the Palm
Pump Clipper, a one-handed nail clipper for patients who suffer from
hemiplegia, a type of paralysis that affects one side of the body.
"In many cases, they can't use half their body and have to have family members or hospital workers clip their nails," he said.
Over the past year, Wendorf's team has been working with Northwestern
licensing associate Gary Behler to patent a finished prototype and
market it to companies who might be interested in manufacturing the
product.
"One of the helpful things that tends to happen with EDC projects is
that we have prototypes that can be showed to people," said Behler, who
is currently looking for potential clients to license the one-handed
nail clipper prototype. "It gives companies something real to look at."
Students work with patients and clients in user studies, finding flaws
in the product and making corresponding adjustments, which is another
valuable aspect to manufacturing companies, Behler said.
"It shows the preferences of the users and that EDC has accommodated them," he said.
With a patent-pending prototype, Wendorf's team hopes to cater to a
larger target population who can further their independence by using
the nail clipper. The finished product actually hit much closer to home
for McCormick sophomore Benjamin Mattson, who worked on the device.
"The first one that got finished actually went to my aunt, who suffers
from rheumatoid arthritis and is unable to clip her own fingernails,"
Mattson said. "I had no idea it would affect me so directly."
The course prompts students to create tangible solutions to problems
facing people in real-world situations, said McCormick freshman Aditya
Kanesa-Thasan, who worked on the Tap-Tight Goggles that Joe uses. After
finishing their prototypes, each team is required to write up a
detailed report of their project as it would be presented to a client.
Although students are working toward marketing their design, many agree
the focus of the class is to be able to make positive changes and meet
clients' needs rather than sell the project.
"It was rewarding; we are still feeling the effects of this project,"
Kanesa-Thasan said. "But the bottom line is that it's actually out
there helping people right now."
tiffanywong2007@u.northwestern.edu
© Copyright 2008 The Daily Northwestern