Healthcare engineering
In its succinct definition, Healthcare Engineering is "engineering involved in all aspects of healthcare”. The term “engineering” in this definition covers all engineering disciplines such as biomedical, chemical, civil, computer, electrical, environmental, industrial, information, materials, mechanical, software, and systems engineering.
Based on the definition of healthcare, a more elaborated definition is: “Healthcare Engineering is engineering involved in all aspects of the prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and management of illness, as well as the preservation and improvement of physical and mental health and well-being, through the services offered to humans by the medical and allied health professions”.
Overview
Almost all engineering disciplines have made significant contributions and brought about advances in healthcare. Contributions have also been made by healthcare professionals who are engaged in supporting, improving, and/or advancing healthcare through engineering approaches. Healthcare Engineering is a multi-disciplinary specialty that focuses on advancing healthcare through engineering approaches involving both healthcare and engineering professionals.Healthcare Engineering is expected to play a role of growing importance as healthcare continues to be one of the world's largest and fastest-growing industries where engineering is a major factor of advancement through creating, developing, and implementing cutting-edge devices, systems, and procedures attributed to breakthroughs in electronics, information technology, miniaturization, material science, optics, and other fields, to address challenges associated with issues such as the continued rise in healthcare costs, the quality and safety of healthcare, care of the aging population, management of common diseases, the impact of high technology, increasing demands for regulatory compliance, risk management, and reducing litigation risk. As the demand for engineers continues to increase in healthcare, Healthcare Engineering will be recognized as the most important profession where engineers make major contributions directly benefiting human health.
History
The American Society of Healthcare Engineering, established in 1962, was one of the first to publicize the term “Healthcare Engineering”. ASHE, as well as its many local affiliate societies, is devoted to the health care physical environment, including design, building, maintenance, and operation of hospitals and other health care facilities, which represents only one sector of engineers’ activities in healthcare. The term “healthcare engineers” first appeared in the scientific literature in 1989, where the critical role of engineers in the healthcare delivery system was discussed. A number of academic programs have adopted the name “Healthcare Engineering”, although the description/definition of “Healthcare Engineering” by these programs varies, as each institution has designed its program based on its own distinctive interest, strength, and focus. The first scholarly journal dedicated to Healthcare Engineering, Journal of Healthcare Engineering, was launched in 2010 by Dr. Ming-Chien Chyu, focusing on engineering involved in all aspects of healthcare delivery processes and systems. In the meantime, a number of companies with various foci have adopted “Healthcare Engineering” in their names.Healthcare Engineering was first defined in a white paper published in 2015 by Dr. Chyu and 40 co-authors who are active members of and contributors to the Healthcare Engineering community all over the world. The white paper was reviewed by more than 280 reviewers, including members of US National Academy of Engineering, Engineering Deans of the world's top universities, administrators and faculty members of Healthcare Engineering academic programs, leaders of healthcare/medical and engineering professional societies/associations, leaders of healthcare industry and government, and Healthcare Engineering professionals from all over the world. This white paper documents a clear, rigorous definition of Healthcare Engineering as an academic discipline, an area of research, a field of specialty, and a profession, and is expected to raise the status and visibility of Healthcare Engineering, help students choose Healthcare Engineering-related fields as majors, help engineers and healthcare professionals choose Healthcare Engineering as a profession, define Healthcare Engineering as a specialty area for the research community, funding agencies, and conference/event organizers, help job searching databases properly categorize Healthcare Engineering jobs, help healthcare employers recruit from the right pool of expertise, bring academic administrators’ attention to Healthcare Engineering in considering new program initiations, help governments and institutions of different levels put Healthcare Engineering into perspective for policy making, budgeting, and other purposes, and help publishers and librarians categorize literature related to Healthcare Engineering. Based on this white paper, a global, non-profit professional organization, , was founded by Dr. Chyu in 2015, that focuses on improving and advancing all aspects of healthcare through engineering approaches.
Purpose
The purpose of Healthcare Engineering is to improve human health and well-being through engineering approaches.Scope
Healthcare Engineering covers the following two major fields:- Engineering for Healthcare Intervention: Engineering involved in the development or provision of any treatment, preventive care, or test that a person could take or undergo to improve health or to help with a particular health problem.
- Engineering for Healthcare Systems: Engineering involved in the complete network of organizations, agencies, facilities, information systems, management systems, financing mechanisms, logistics, and all trained personnel engaged in delivering healthcare within a geographical area.
Table 1. Healthcare Engineering subjects |
Engineering for healthcare intervention A. Fundamentals 1. Biomechanics 2. Biomaterials 3. Biomedical instruments 4. Medical devices 5. Engineering for surgery 6. Medical imaging 7. Organ transplantation 8. Artificial organs 9. Drug delivery 10. Genetic engineering 11. Engineering for diagnosis/Detection 12. Health informatics, Information engineering & Decision support 13. Disinfection engineering B. Engineering for disease prevention, Diagnosis, Treatment, and management 1. Cardiovascular disease 2. Cancer 3. Alzheimer's disease 4. Diabetes 5. Respiratory disease 6. Obesity 7. Degenerative diseases 8. Others C. Engineering for Patient care 1. Patient safety 2. Critical care 3. Neonatal care 4. Home healthcare 5. Elderly care 6. Patient monitoring 7. Health disparities 8. Disaster management D. Engineering for medical specialties 1. Allergy and Immunology 2. Anesthesiology 3. Cardiology 4. Critical care medicine 5. Emergency medicine 6. Endocrinology 7. Gastroenterology 8. General surgery 9. Geriatrics 10. Infectious disease 11. Neurology 12. Neurosurgery 13. Nuclear medicine 14. Occupational medicine 15. Oncology 16. Ophthalmology 17. Orthopedics 18. Pathology 19. Pediatrics 20. Physical medicine and rehabilitation 21. Plastic, reconstructive and aesthetic surgery 22. Public health 23. Pulmonology 24. Radiology 25. Radiotherapy 26. Rheumatology 27. Sports medicine 28. Urology 29. Vascular medicine 30. Others E. Engineering for dental specialties 1. Endodontics 2. Oral and maxillofacial pathology, radiology, and surgery 3. Orthodontics and dentofacial orthopedics 4. Periodontics 5. Prosthodontics 6. Others F. Engineering for allied health specialties 1. Audiology 2. Clinical laboratory science 3. Environmental health 4. Occupational therapy 5. Orthotics and prosthetics 6. Physical therapy 7. Rehabilitation 8. Respiratory therapy 9. Speech therapy 10. Others G. Engineering for nursing - including nursing in all related areas, particularly B, C, D, E, A, and B. H. Engineering for pharmacy 1. Pharmaceutical design & Development 2. Bio-/Pharmaceutical manufacturing 3. Pharmaceutical devices 4. Pharmaceutical testing 5. Pharmaceutical information systems 6. Clinical science 7. Regulatory compliance |
Engineering for healthcare systems A. Healthcare system management, Improvement & Reform 1. Quality, Cost, Efficiency, Effectiveness 2. Operations research & Systems engineering 3. Lean, Six sigma, Total quality management 4. Human factors 5. High reliability organization 6. Resilience engineering 7. Rural health B. Healthcare information systems 1. Electronic health record 2. E-Health 3. M-Health 4. Telemedicine 5. Wireless technology 6. Data mining & Big data 7. Information security C. Healthcare facilities 1. Healthcare infrastructure 2. Healthcare energy systems 3. Healthcare sustainability & Green design 4. Environmental health and safety D. Healthcare policy |
Others A. Healthcare engineering education & Training 1. Collegiate education 2. Continued education B. Future of healthcare |