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Clinical Immersion and Biomedical Engineering Design Education: “Engineering Grand Rounds”

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Abstract

Grand Rounds is a ritual of medical education and inpatient care comprised of presenting the medical problems and treatment of a patient to an audience of physicians, residents, and medical students. Traditionally, the patient would be in attendance for the presentation and would answer questions. Grand Rounds has evolved considerably over the years with most sessions being didactic—rarely having a patient present (although, in some instances, an actor will portray the patient). Other members of the team, such as nurses, nurse practitioners, and biomedical engineers, are not traditionally involved in the formal teaching process. In this study we examine the rapid ideation in a clinical setting to forge a system of cross talk between engineers and physicians as a steady state at the praxis of ideation and implementation.

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Conflict of Interest

The authors acknowledge no conflicts of interest and that there have been no human subjects used in these studies.

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A statement regarding approval and accordance appears in the "Methods" section of the manuscript.

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Correspondence to Matthew Walker III.

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Associate Editor Ajit P. Yoganathan oversaw the review of this article.

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Walker, M., Churchwell, A.L. Clinical Immersion and Biomedical Engineering Design Education: “Engineering Grand Rounds”. Cardiovasc Eng Tech 7, 1–6 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13239-016-0257-y

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13239-016-0257-y

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