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Get the most interesting and important stories from the 51精品视频.Innovating in a PInCh
wasn鈥檛 planning on his research for patients with asthma being used for a pandemic. However, when COVID-19 arrived in the U.S. this spring, he and his team at Acoustic Waveform Respiratory Evaluation, or for short, found ways to pivot their research to help, though not without obstacles.
鈥淲e had to pause all our research operations. We鈥檝e had to adjust to all the precautions to make sure we keep our patients safe while also provide the care they need,鈥 said Forno, an assistant professor of at the 51精品视频 . 鈥淓ven to this day, operations are being done carefully and it鈥檚 taken longer than expected to advance the project.鈥
However, Wednesday鈥檚 virtual put his mind more at ease. AWARE was a grand prize winner for this year鈥檚 competition, taking home one of three $100,000 grand prizes.
AWARE is a smartphone-based solution that enables at-home lung function monitoring for people with lung disorders, such as asthma, COPD and cystic fibrosis. The project was also a winner of a $25,000 bonus for addressing aspects of the COVID-19 pandemic. With the prize money, the team will gather data from healthy volunteers to advance the app, and then examine patients with respiratory illnesses. The AWARE team includes Wei Chen, associate professor of pediatrics and biostatistics, and Wei Gao, associate professor at the .
鈥51精品视频 has done a great job overall given the circumstances,鈥 Forno said. 鈥淚t was definitely reassuring that the competition continued this year. It was excellent that PInCh adapted in a way that we could do everything virtually.鈥
While AWARE received bonus money from PInCh for its pandemic applications, competition organizers said they wanted to make sure researchers with non-COVID-related projects had the opportunity to showcase their innovations, too.
鈥淲e wanted to acknowledge that things that address pandemics are important, but we鈥檙e running a standard PInCh this year. We wanted to give researchers the chance to get some traction on their projects, even if they weren鈥檛 focused on COVID,鈥 said , assistant professor in the at 51精品视频 and director of the PInCh program.
Projects such as , a special EEG clip designed for people with coarse and curly hair, and , a smartwatch activity monitor that measures hyperactivity associated with ADHD, were among the winners that addressed non-pandemic health concerns.
From live stage to virtual chat room
Maier said pivoting from an in-person event to a virtual one had its challenges. In previous years, the competition brought research teams together in person to network along with pitching to a live judging panel and audience.
With the virtual competition, finalists created web pages describing their projects, including a brief video and had five minutes to answer questions from a panel of judges in a virtual chat room.
鈥淏ecause an aim of PInCh is building a network of community, going virtual was not ideal,鈥 said Maier. 鈥淏ut everyone persevered. I think that constraint led us to innovate. I think the researchers were enthusiastic to see there were opportunities around, even with the pandemic.鈥
One researcher who navigated the virtual setting was , assistant professor of at 51精品视频. Zahid was a 2016 and for her work on cardiac and lung-targeting peptides. For this year鈥檚 grand prize-winning entry, she focused on peptides that deliver small genetic molecules to treat the lungs of patients with cystic fibrosis.聽
鈥淭he adrenaline wasn鈥檛 raging the way it normally would, but that also made it less exciting,鈥 Zahid said. 鈥淚 kind of enjoyed being on the stage and being able to convey my ideas to a large group of people. You get the visual and auditory feedback. That鈥檚 limited in a virtual environment. But the competition organizers did a stellar job. This virtual environment adds to efficiency.鈥
鈥淧InCh has been incredibly helpful and supportive to make everything work so seamlessly,鈥 said , a resident in 51精品视频鈥檚 . 鈥淧robably one of the silver linings through all of this is seeing how much we can accomplish virtually. I feel like we鈥檙e entering a new era of conducting research.鈥
Camison and , associate professor of plastic surgery at 51精品视频, were also grand prize winners for their project, . REPLICA aims to make custom-made cartilage ear implants that decrease complexity and operative time of facial surgeries, created with a state-of-the-art, high-precision cartilage milling process.
鈥淭he COVID-19 pandemic did not stop the PInCh teams from creating innovative and unique solutions to improve health,鈥 said聽聽director of the Clinical and Translational Science Institute and associate senior vice chancellor for clinical and translational research in 51精品视频鈥檚 schools of the health sciences. 鈥淲e are grateful for the work that each of the finalists put into their ideas. They all found ways to solve health issues that affect everyday life.鈥
For a complete list of winners from this year鈥檚 PInCh, including $25,000 prize winners, visit the聽.