Come join the e-NABLE organization and thought leaders in medicine, industry and public policy for a ground-breaking, industry-defining event at Johns Hopkins Hospital that will include the delivery of donated prosthetic hands to children with upper limb differences.
MAGIC’s involvement and support of e-NABLE is through the Access and Collaborative Technologies initiative (MAGIC ACT), and the work of Dr. Jonathan Schull, research scientist at MAGIC and his team of RIT students. We are grateful for the engaged support of the Biomedical Engineering program in the Kate Gleason College of Engineering, the College of Health Sciences and Technology, the office of the Vice President for Research, and others across campus in support of this work.