scholarly journals Technology Transfer Assistance Project Brings VA Health Care Ideas to Life

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-73
Author(s):  
Jonathan Duvall ◽  
Garrett G. Grindle ◽  
John Kaplan ◽  
Michael Lain ◽  
Rory A. Cooper

Clinicians and staff of the Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care System (VA), who provide services to veterans, have invented many devices and methods for improving veterans' lives. However, translating those inventions to the market has been a challenge due to limited collaboration between the clinical inventors and the scientists, researchers, and engineers who can produce the prototypes necessary for licensing the technology. The VA Technology Transfer Program office and the Human Engineering Research Laboratories, a research laboratory with experience with developing prototypes and licensing technology, jointly developed a program called the Technology Transfer Assistance Project (TTAP) to bridge the gap between clinical inventors and prototypes ready for licensing. This paper describes TTAP and provides examples of the first inventions that were developed or enhanced through TTAP.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Duvall ◽  
Garrett G. Grindle ◽  
John Kaplan ◽  
David Marks ◽  
Lee Sylvers ◽  
...  

The COVID-19 pandemic stressed healthcare systems all over the world. Two primary challenges that healthcare systems faced were a shortage of personal protective equipment and the need for new technologies to handle infection prevention for staff and patients. The Department of Veteran’s Affairs (VA) Technology Transfer Program responded by prioritizing the development of innovations in the Technology Transfer Assistance Project which addressed the pandemic. This paper describes several innovations that addressed the needs of the VA healthcare system during the pandemic and how they were rapidly developed.


2006 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 99-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan B. Perlin

Ten years ago, it would have been hard to imagine the publication of an issue of a scholarly journal dedicated to applying lessons from the transformation of the United States Department of Veterans Affairs Health System to the renewal of other countries' national health systems. Yet, with the recent publication of a dedicated edition of the Canadian journal Healthcare Papers (2005), this actually happened. Veterans Affairs health care also has been similarly lauded this past year in the lay press, being described as ‘the best care anywhere’ in the Washington Monthly, and described as ‘top-notch healthcare’ in US News and World Report's annual health care issue enumerating the ‘Top 100 Hospitals’ in the United States (Longman, 2005; Gearon, 2005).


2009 ◽  
Vol 57 (10) ◽  
pp. 1908-1914 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolyn W. Zhu ◽  
Joan D. Penrod ◽  
Joseph S. Ross ◽  
Cornelia Dellenbaugh ◽  
Mary Sano

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