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What is Bioengineering? |
What is bioengineering?
There are as many definitions of Bioengineering as there are groups working in the field. In the
area of health, the US National Institute of Health formed a Bioengineering Definition Committee
that released the following preamble and definition on July 24, 1997:
Preamble
Bioengineering is rooted in physics, mathematics, chemistry, biology,
and the life sciences. It is the application of a systematic,
quantitative, and integrative way of thinking about and approaching the
solutions of problems important to biology, medical research, clinical
proactive, and population studies. The NIH Bioengineering Consortium
agreed on the following definition for bioengineering research on
biology, medicine, behavior, or health recognizing that no definition
could completely eliminate overlap with other research disciplines or
preclude variations in interpretation by different individuals and
organizations.
Definition
Bioengineering integrates physical, chemical, or mathematical
sciences and engineering principles for the study of biology, medicine,
behavior, or health. It advances fundamental concepts, creates knowledge
for the molecular to the organ systems levels, and develops innovative
biologics, materials, processes, implants, devices, and informatics
approaches for the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of disease, for
patient rehabilitation, and for improving health.
If we ignore the obvious health focus in the NIH definition, it is clear that
bioengineering is concerned with applying an engineering approach (systematic,
quantitative, and integrative) and an engineering focus (the solutions of problems)
to biological problems.
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