Intrigued to Innovate
In this deeply personal episode of Intrigued to Innovate, host Dr Jovan Tan sits down with Lakshmi Sujeesh, a recent graduate of the NUS Innovation and Design Program (iDP) who transformed her childhood fear of eye treatments into EyeWonder™, a groundbreaking device that's changing how children experience contact lens insertion for myopia control. What began as a clinical observation of a struggling child at the Singapore National Eye Centre (SNEC) became a mission fuelled by empathy, pig eyeballs stored in home freezers, and relentless iteration. Despite contact lenses being 80% effective at slowing myopia progression, only 10% of children adopt them because of overwhelming fear. Lakshmi's solution? An ingenious innovation that hides the lens from view, replacing terror with curiosity and reducing training time from 90 minutes to under 30. Working within the Duke-NUS Health Innovator Program (D-HIP) alongside a medical student and an MBA student, Lakshmi's interdisciplinary team secured a S$50,000 grant, filed a provisional patent, secured news coverage on The Straits Times, and attracted interest from major lens manufacturers - all within 9 months. Their journey reveals how the best healthcare innovations emerge not from pure engineering brilliance but from genuine empathy for the people you're trying to help. This episode reveals: · Why Singapore is the "myopia capital of the world" and why children refuse a highly effective treatment because of psychological barriers, not medical ones · How camping at wet markets for pig eyeballs and countless failed suction attempts led to a breakthrough in her proposed prototype · Why does hiding the lens and using a pinpoint light source create fearless children who confidently use the device themselves · The power of interdisciplinary teams: how a doctor's clinical perspective, an MBA's market insight, and an engineer's prototyping transformed their solution · Why prototyping "ugly" early and testing with real users unlocks insights you'd never discover in the lab Whether you're a student engineer, a healthcare innovator, or anyone curious about turning personal pain into purposeful solutions, discover how one young woman engineer's childhood experience became the compass for a medical device revolution. Guest: Lakshmi Sujeesh, proud young alumnus of NUS iDP, National University of Singapore (NUS) Hosted by: Dr Jovan Tan Produced by: Low Tse Han & Dr Jovan Tan Presented by: NUS Innovation & Design Programme (iDP) at the NUS Engineering Design and Innovation Centre (EDIC)
12 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Intrigued to Innovate!