Past Event
Special Series

Boston Tech Hub Faculty Working Group: DIY Medical Devices

Invitation Only Harvard Faculty, Fellows, Staff, and Students

The Boston Tech Hub Faculty Working Group, hosted by former Secretary of Defense and Harvard Kennedy School Belfer Center Director Ash Carter and Harvard SEAS Dean Frank Doyle, will convene its first fall session on the topic of Do-It-Yourself (DIY) medical devices and the lack of formal approval and safety evaluation in their development.  This session will evaluate the current status quo across the DIY medical technology community and explore solutions to promote the development of safe and effective technologies for medical care.

Emerging DIY medical technologies have been facilitated by public access to open source hardware, open source code, mobile devices, new user interfaces, among other factors.

DIY Medical Devices

The Boston Tech Hub Faculty Working Group (FWG), hosted by former Secretary of Defense and Belfer Center Director Ash Carter and Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Dean Frank Doyle, are meetings that explore and answer the question: How do we define the public purpose in the context of emerging technologies and integrate public purpose into the development and management of those technologies?

Our collective future requires that experts apply knowledge in the service of civic duty and public purpose. The brightest and most creative problem solvers seek the hardest and most interesting problems. These meetings are an opportunity for faculty members and tech industry experts to evaluate the impacts of an emerging technology and exchange interdisciplinary approaches to guide their development. Furthermore, by gathering together, developing unfamiliar connections, and advancing new ideas, this community will be better prepared to shape the future of technological advancement.

The agenda for these meetings is designed to:

● Identify current controversies or debates surrounding this emerging technology
● Discuss inflection points where risks can be mitigated or public purpose can be integrated
● Propose mechanisms for mitigating risk or integrating public purpose

During the fall semester, our sessions focus on a selection of specific emerging and disruptive technologies. The spring semester sessions build on concerns raised and conclusions reached during the fall sessions and focus on potential solutions to help shape a future in which technology benefits humanity as a whole.

The first fall session for 2018 is on the topic of Do-It-Yourself (DIY) medical technologies and the lack of formal approval and safety evaluation in their development.  This session will evaluate the current status quo across the DIY medical technology community and explore solutions to promote the development of safe and effective technologies for medical care.