“…International design teams have been responsible for several new health technologies, the most notable being the low-cost bubble continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) for neonates, a low-cost syringe pump that uses mechanical energy to last between intermittent power outages, a diagnostic device for postpartum hemorrhage, a hand-powered centrifuge made of a salad spinner, an electronic medical records system, and an alternative consumable to test for anemia that costs less than 1¢. 4,5,18,19,25,29 The Rice BME faculty has also collaborated with the Malawi faculty to build the undergraduate BME program at the University of Malawi, which is a program in the Department of Engineering. 17,28 Kathleen Sienko, Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering and BME at the University of Michigan, is Director of the Global Health Design Initiative (GHDI) and Co-Director of the Center for Socially Engaged Design.…”