Online Master's in Biomedical Engineering @ Case.edu
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Innovations in Imaging

History

 

Celebrating 40 Years of Discovery

 


1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000-Present | Department Chairs
 

The Department of Biomedical Engineering at Case Western Reserve University was officially approved by the Board of Trustees on May 9, 1968. The roots of biomedical engineering actually extend further back, as the university has always had a strong commitment to science and engineering. The Case Institute of Technology, out of which the department would merge, launched the Engineering Design Center in 1960. By early 1962, plans were underway to enroll graduate students from existing centers at Case, including the Systems Research Center, Engineering Design Center and the Environmental Health Program as well as from Western Reserve University School of Medicine, into a graduate biomedical engineering program. In 1962, Case added an undergraduate elective sequence in biomedical engineering. In 1963, it became the first such program to receive a training grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

In 1967, Case merged with the 140-year-old Western Reserve University to form Case Western Reserve University. The Biomedical Engineering Division was formed, with almost 40 full and part-time faculty members supervising 47 graduate students. In 1968, the university’s trustees officially formed the Department of Biomedical Engineering, one of only six such departments or programs in the country at the time. Case Western Reserve created the first MD/PhD program in 1969 to develop engineers with a physician’s perspective.

 

The 1970's

Faculty were engaged in leadership, and a strong engineering focus was developed across programs. The department implemented a two-year Master of Science degree in clinical engineering, but later abandoned, as few hospitals were able to staff gradates. In 1972, Case Western Reserve became one of the first schools to offer a bachelor’s degree in biomedical engineering. Early tracks included materials, instrumentation/electronics and systems/controls. Shortly after graduating its first students, the undergraduate program was one of the first accredited by the Engineers’ Council for Professional Development (which later became the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology).

In 1977, the Rehabilitation Engineering Center was created to expand the focus on neural applications, and was the department’s first hospital-based program, leaning on strong institutional relationships with MetroHealth Medical Center (then called Cleveland Metropolitan General Hospital), the Cleveland VA Medical Center and the Department of Orthopaedics of the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine.

 

The 1980's

By 1980, the department had approximately 80 graduate students and 60 undergraduates. By the end of the decade, that would grow to more than 100 graduate students and 120 undergraduates.  In 1980, the department received a Whitaker Foundation Special Opportunities grant and NSF grant to assemble a computer system to create an image-computing laboratory. 

 

The 1990's

Throughout the decade, the department was consistently ranked among the top five in the nation by U.S.News & World Report. By 1997, the student body had grown to more than 200 undergraduate students and 120 graduate students.

In 1996, the department received a multimillion-dollar Whitaker Development Award, which helped shift focus to biomedical engineering at the cellular and molecular levels. An NIH facilities grant allowed a major space increase and renovation of the Wickenden building, which allowed for co-location of all primary biomedical engineering faculty and enhanced interaction.

In 1999, the Cleveland Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) Center launched.


2000-Present

In 2000, the department was awarded a continuation and extension of the Whitaker Development Award. Co-op placements quadrupled and internship placements more than doubled, with establishment of a BME Student Employment Program.

In 2006, the department was one of nine schools to receive $4.5 million partnership awards from the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation to promote translation of biomedical engineering research from academia to commercial markets and to patients in the form of improved patient care. The Case-Coulter Translational Research Partnership (CCTRP) relies on coordinated, interdisciplinary teams of scientists and clinical practitioners to bring new technology form bench to bedside. In partnership with the foundation, the department created processes to identify the most likely technologies, assisted in identifying critical next steps for research and supported early-stage intellectual property assessments and market potential. In 2008, an anonymous $2 million gift endowed the CCTRP program directorship, ensuring the program’s translational research mission in perpetuity. The program has funded more than 30 promising translational research projects.

In 2002, the Center for Modeling Integrated Metabolic Systems was established with an $11.8 NIH award. The National Foundation for Cancer Research Center for Molecular Imaging at Case Western Reserve was launched in 2006. The Center for Computational Imaging and Personalized Diagnostics launched in 2012.


 

Department Chairs

Donald Gann – 1968-1970

Harry Nara – 1970-1972

Leon Harmon – 1972-1974

Peter Katona – 1974-1976

Robert Plonsey – 1976-1980

Peter Katona – 1980 – 1987

Gerald Saidel – 1987-1999

Patrick Crago – 1999 – 2007

P. Hunter Peckham – 2007 – 2008

Jeffrey Duerk – 2008-2013

Robert Kirsch – 2013 – present