Developing a Medical Device: turning your idea into a successful commercial product that’s improving detection, diagnosis or treatment

The University of Oxford is host of a very vibrant research and innovation ecosystem. In the recent year, the Oxford Institute of Biomedical Engineering, through its spin-out Organox, has seen its first therapeutic device, a novel organ preservation device, approved by the FDA in 2021. The device is the results of more than 15 years of cross-disciplinary works between several department at the University and its spin-out. OxVent, a social enterprise from the University of Oxford and King’s College London rapidly developed a deployable and low-cost ventilator due to the accrued needs through the Covid-19 pandemic in a record time. Developing a medical device is however no walk-in the park and require a broad set of knowledge, collaborative work, between scientific, commercial, legal and regulatory teams.

In this webinar series, we intend to bring knowledge, tools and a network to academic researchers developing their own device and ideas at the university. This series aims to support the academic community transitioning from basic and fundamental research into the translational research space, where the bases for a commercial, or non-for profit and impact driven projects, needs to be lay down. Following the 2021 webinar series ‘Developing a Medical Device: turning your idea into a successful commercial product that’s improving detection, diagnosis or treatment’, we will continue the series in 2022 to address topics

Wednesday 11 May 2022 (3rd Week, Trinity Term)

Wednesday 18 May 2022 (4th Week, Trinity Term)

Wednesday 25 May 2022 (5th Week, Trinity Term)

Wednesday 1 June 2022 (6th Week, Trinity Term)

Wednesday 8 June 2022 (7th Week, Trinity Term)

Wednesday 15 June 2022 (8th Week, Trinity Term)

Wednesday 22 June 2022 (9th Week, Trinity Term)

Wednesday 29 June 2022 (10th Week, Trinity Term)

Wednesday 6 July 2022 (11th Week, Trinity Term)

This series features in the following public collections: