
Inside the Innovation Factory
Cleveland Clinic Innovations
Three new startups demonstrate how Cleveland Clinic Innovations is helping translate good ideas into patient-centered solutions.

Digital Health Innovation in Action: Top Trends Shaping 2024
Cleveland Clinic Innovations
For patients and providers alike, the digital transformation of healthcare is happening just in time.

Innovation in Women’s Health
Rice Business
Rice Business alumni are confronting stigmas, spreading awareness and empowering women to take charge of their health.

Rewriting the Future for Mothers and Babies
Cleveland Clinic
“By improving the quality of care for pregnant mothers, we are looking into the future and improving the health of entire communities and healthcare systems.”

Imaging the Future
Ohio State Wexner Medical Center
Orlando Simonetti, PhD, has pioneered the field of cardiac imaging and is now unveiling a rare type of MRI scanner that promises to expand cardiac MRI access for thousands of patients.

From foundational discoveries to profound impact
Penn Medicine
How decades of mRNA research at Penn made powerful new COVID-19 vaccines possibleāand opened a new vista for future discoveries.

The Ride of a Lifetime
McGill Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Dr. Phil Gold’s friends and colleagues paint a vivid portrait of an icon whose influence will be felt for generations to come.
A Bard for Health Equity
Penn Medicine
“For Dr. Richard Wender, primary care and social justice go hand in hand.”

Raising the Bar for Organ Transplantation
Cleveland Clinic
Cleveland Clinicās transplant centers in Ohio, Florida and Abu Dhabi are pushing the boundaries of innovation to give more patients the gift of life.
Where Anatomy Meets Innovation
Western University – Schulich School of Medicine
When the outbreak of the pandemic prevented students from learning anatomy through in-person cadaveric dissection in the lab, Charys Martin, PhD, was forced to improvise, creating āLive from the Lab.ā

What a Decades-long Study Teaches Us About Brain Health and Aging
UW Medicine
The Seattle Longitudinal Study followed participants from 1956 to 2012 to track cognitive changes over the adult lifespan. See how UW researchers are using the data to find new insights into brain health.

Heart researcher takes on unlikely disease: cancer
Ohio State Wexner Medical Center
Dr. Sakima Smithās groundbreaking research is expanding understanding of the connection between cancer treatment and heart disease in the pioneering field of cardio-oncology.
Computing the Future of Medicine
Western University – Schulich School of Medicine
A trio of researchers are leading the way with medical bioinformatics research and developing new tools to convert data into medical knowledge.

Paying it Forward
Cleveland Clinic
āItās amazing to think we can be a part of breakthroughs for patients like my mother.ā

Advanced robotic surgery giving pancreatic cancer patients ‘the gift of time’
Ohio State Wexner Medical Center
Mary Dillhoff, MD, is part of an elite group of surgeons leveraging robotic technology to improve outcomes for patients with some of the deadliest forms of pancreatic, liver and bile duct cancers.
Beyond the Pap Smear
McGill Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
McGill researchers have developed a novel alternative to standard pap smears and HIV tests, one that has the potential to detect cervical cancer earlier than ever before.

Keeping the Vision Alive
Cleveland Clinic
“Children are used to only being able to see one way, so they don’t always realize there’s a problem.”
Tackling an Epidemic
McGill Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
“It was eye-opening to see how much the healthcare workers in the Cree community could accomplish with limited resources.”

Driving new AFib treatments by identifying its source
The Ohio State Wexner Medical Center
“This imaging allows us to see how electricity spreads across the structure of the human heart in 3D.”
Cancer Doesn’t Wait
McGill Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
“It’s clear today that the risk of not being diagnosed and not being treated for cancer is worse than the risk of catching COVID-19.”






