In: Center News

Seed grant awards. Johns Hopkins Malone Center for Engineering in Healthcare. Overlaid over Malone Hall.

Malone/Wilmer Seed Grant winners announced

Seed grant awards support research that applies engineering solutions to detect, monitor, and treat ocular diseases.

A person in PPE works with a robot.

Autonomous robots are coming to the operating room, The Wall Street Journal

Axel Krieger featured in The Wall Street Journal for new advances in robotic surgery.

Headshot of Casey Overby Taylor.

Casey Overby Taylor earns NIH Genomic Innovator Award

Overby Taylor was recognized for her research in developing and evaluating methods to incorporate genomic results in clinical decision support.

A screencap of news coverage titled "Search for Solutions: Robots give high-tech help to essential workers, Johns Hopkins." A mannequin is set up in a hospital bed.

Robots now on the front lines in battle against COVID-19, NBC Nightly News

John C. Malone Professor Russell Taylor was featured in an NBC Nightly News story on robots that are helping frontline workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Headshot of Jeremy Brown.

Jeremy D. Brown wins two grants to investigate haptic perception in robotic applications

Grants from the NIH-funded Interdisciplinary Rehabilitation Engineering Research Career Development Program (IREK12) and the National Science Foundation (NSF) will support Brown's research on haptic perception in robotic applications.

A mobile testing booth in a parking lot.

Mobile COVID-19 testing booths keep healthcare providers safe, CBS Baltimore

Researchers from University of Maryland, Johns Hopkins University, and the Robert Fischell Institute for Biomedical Devices have developed a mobile testing booth that will give healthcare providers the ability to test patients for COVID-19 without risking their own health.