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㽶ֱbiomedical engineering students get real-world experience through innovative partnership with UMMC

㽶ֱbiomedical engineering students get real-world experience through innovative partnership with UMMC

Contact: Camille Carskadon

STARKVILLE, Miss.—From tackling pneumothorax to developing better patient monitoring systems, rising seniors in Mississippi State’s Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering are gaining real-world experience through a partnership with the University of Mississippi Medical Center.

A student is pictured placing a stethoscope on a patient's chest.
Rising Mississippi State biomedical engineering students are gaining hands-on, real-world experience through a partnership with the University of Mississippi Medical Center. (Photo by Grace Cockrell)

The UMMC-㽶ֱEngineering Excellence in Device Development program, now in its second year, pairs 㽶ֱbiomedical engineering students with UMMC clinicians and researchers to identify and solve pressing healthcare challenges. During the eight-week summer program, students rotate through multiple projects at UMMC, gaining hands-on skills and a deeper understanding of the issues faced by healthcare providers. They return to 㽶ֱto continue developing their chosen project for the remainder of the academic year as part of their senior capstone.

Alex Thomasson, ABE department head, said the program is “truly innovative” and “broadens students substantially while they are still undergraduates.”

“Students get to spend time in a real clinical situational context, actually identify problems themselves and work alongside professionals,” added David Vandenheever, program coordinator and 㽶ֱagricultural and biological engineering associate professor. “That is an exciting opportunity and experience that not every student gets to have.”

Vandenheever emphasized the importance of biomedical engineering students solving actual problems rather than completing predefined issues created in a classroom setting. Ultimately, he wants students to graduate with this type of mindset and the ability to innovate through collaboration and open-ended brainstorming.

“We want them to develop an entrepreneurial mindset, where they’re actively identifying problems that can be solved using engineering principles,” Vandenheever said.

The program is funded for five years with plans to expand the number of participating student teams in the coming years.

Visit to learn more about the 㽶ֱDepartment of Agricultural and Biological Engineering.

The Bagley College of Engineering is online atand can be found on,andat @msuengineering.

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