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Massey University Student’s Re-engineered DrugTesting Kit Invention Through To The Final Heat Of James Dyson Award

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Wed Oct 18 2023 13:00:00 GMT+1300 (New Zealand Daylight Time)

Massey University Student’s Re-engineered DrugTesting Kit Invention Through To The Final Heat Of James Dyson Award

Wednesday, 18 October 2023, 11:02 am
Press Release: Massey University

New Zealand, 18 October 2023: Today marks the beginning of the international stages of the 2023 James Dyson Award, a global engineering award that calls on students and recent graduates to create a design that solves a problem. The global shortlist of 20 pioneering inventions is announced today, with all inventors in with the chance to become a global winner and receive NZ$57,000* to support the next stage of their invention.

New Zealand’s shortlisted entry, Pre-Podium, invented by Massey University student Nick Holland, is a re-engineered drug testing kit that aims to improve the athlete’s experience. The current drug testing experience can be unnerving and uncomfortable for athletes and current drug testing kits offer very few accommodations for women and athletes with disabilities. Pre-Podium is the first athlete drug testing kit that seriously considers the athlete’s experience across all stages of the testing process, accommodating all athletes’ needs with its ergonomic and considered design. Having already achieved the national James Dyson Award 2023 title, Nick has now been selected for the global 20 shortlist, with the potential to become a global winner with his pioneering invention.

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Nick Holland, inventor of Pre-Podium, national James Dyson Award winner 2023 and Top 20 global finalist commented:

“Drug testing is essential to protect clean sport and ensure athletes are competing on a level playing field. As an athlete, fair sports is close to my heart, so I was surprised to learn how stressful and unpleasant the process often is. Pre-podium is a drug testing kit designed to improve the athlete experience throughout the testing process, with a particular focus on increasing ease and minimising urine spills during the sample collection and distribution stages. I am proud to be selected as the national winner for this year’s James Dyson Award. It is a great acknowledgement of the thinking, development, and time that I put into solving this previously ignored problem.”

Invention changes lives

Students and young engineers around the world continue to demonstrate how inquisitive minds can push the boundaries of invention and create solutions that can change lives.

Turkey’s shortlisted entry, ForestGuard 2.0, is a response to the devastating wildfires that students witnessed tear through the country in 2021 and since. The invention, created by a team from Istanbul Bilgi University, uses sensor-to-satellite technology to alert authorities at the earliest sign of a potential wildfire, hoping to vastly reduce the risk in future years.

Meanwhile in Singapore, young inventor E Ian Siew was motivated by his difficult experience recovering from open-heart surgery to create a better solution. Consulting with experts from the National University Hospital in Singapore, he created a vest-like device for post-operative rehabilitation, which improves support for the fusion of the sternum bone after surgery.

Sometimes, even the simplest ideas can have a significant global impact. In the Philippines, young entrepreneur Jeremy De Leon created Make-roscope, a simple keychain tool that turns a smartphone or tablet into a microscope. Improving access to laboratory tools for students across the world has potentially huge implications for the future generation of scientists, and the invention has already been used by over 3,000 Filipino students and teachers.

Discussing what it takes to make the shortlist, Rachael Pink, Head of Technology Development at Dyson, said:

“The inventor needs to demonstrate that they really understand how their idea will work; they need to show that they have thought about how their idea can be realised in a robust way and that it will stand up to the challenges it will face in use. Some of the best entries we saw demonstrated that they had failed along their design process, but learnt from these failures and made their designs even better.”

Deliberation powered by diversity of thought

Great ideas spring from diversity of thought and experience. The 14 Dyson engineers forming the panel for this year’s Top 20 work across Dyson R&D centres in Singapore, the UK, Malaysia and the Philippines, and specialise in engineering fields including sustainability, electronics, manufacturing, acoustics and energy storage. They were joined by undergraduates from the Dyson Institute of Engineering and Technology to share their insight, challenging conventional design processes.

The panel analysed, debated and reviewed all the national finalists and runners-up, coming together to whittle down the entries to create this year’s Top 20 shortlist.

“The James Dyson Award provides a platform for young inventors to showcase their innovative ideas on a global stage. It was refreshing to see so many inventions offering solutions ranging across medicine and sustainability,” said Hong Fei Hu, Head of Electronics at Dyson.

Freya Moore, Undergraduate Engineer at the Dyson Institute of Engineering and Technology, said: “For students, the James Dyson Award draws an exciting picture of what engineers can do. Being part of the panel allowed me to learn about real problems I may otherwise never have come across and see all the different ways to approach those challenges.”

The global winners of the competition will be announced on 15 November.

The Top 20 Shortlist (in alphabetical order).

You can download supporting imagery of New Zealand’s national winner here and a selection of the below shortlist here.

Invention

Solution

Inventor(s)

Country

AISIG

Devices that enable the visually impaired to safely cross pedestrian crossings using AI-based image recognition.

Ikuya Tanaka Sergio and Narushima Masaaki

Japan

Auxobrace

A rehabilitation device for patients who have undergone open heart surgery. Inspired by the inventor’s own experience of post-operative care.

E Ian Siew

Singapore

AVA

Adaptive personal hygiene tools for individuals with spasticity. 

Javier Pascual Paredes

Spain

Boreas

A device to automate and gamify pulmonary rehabilitation in hospitals, inspired by team leader Piotr’s father’s experience with COVID.

Piotr Falkowski, Bazyli Leczkowski, Maciej Pikuliński and Anna Pastor

Poland

E-COATING

A sustainable roof and exterior wall coating with a high cooling effect, reducing the need for air conditioning in warmer countries. The material uses waste glass and could vastly reduce the amount of electricity used on cooling.

Hoi Fung Ronaldo Chan and Can Xiao

Hong Kong

Ergotech

An ergonomic laparoscopy tool to improve surgeons’ comfort and reduce wrist strain. The inventor was inspired by his internship shadowing a medical device design process.

George Clarke

Ireland

ForestGuard 2.0

An ultra-early, sensor-to-satellite wildfire detection system. Inspired by witnessing Turkey’s wildfires in 2021, the system alerts the authorities at the earliest sign of fire.

Ecem Ertan, Onur Sertgil, Rana Imam Esirger and Suat Batuhan Esirger

Turkey

Gutsy

A prosthetic medical port offering reprieve from ostomy bags, the inventor was inspired to create a better alternative by a friend who received colostomy surgery at 26 years old.

Charlotte Böhning

US

LEKA

A biodegradable, non-invasive, and accessible test to detect cysticercosis parasite.

Ximena García Ortega

Mexico

Lunet

A 3D printable mechanical finger prosthesis for finger amputees. The inventor plans to make the design of Lunet completely free and open source to help as many people as possible.

David Edquilang

US

Make-roscope

A portable keychain which turns your smartphone or tablet into a microscope.

Jeremy De Leon

Philippines

Oasis

A wearable device to reduce visual distractions for those with ADHD. 

Joel Olympio

Ireland

os*tomy

A sustainable and affordable bag for colostomy patients. The inventor was inspired by his time working in Tanzania as a medical assistant to create a lower-cost alternative to traditional colostomy options.

Nikolaus Potapow

Austria

Pleural

A smart airway clearance device for help with mucus-related respiratory conditions. The team was inspired by their relatives’ experiences with chronic respiratory experiences and the struggle to access care.

Daniel Hale, Yihan Dong, Fergus Laidlaw and William Eliot

UK

Pre-Podium

A drug testing kit designed to improve the athlete anti-doping testing experience. The solution was prompted by hearing about his friend’s uncomfortable experience with the testing process, and wanted to create a better, more inclusive solution. 

Nick Holland

New Zealand

REVR

A retrofit kit to convert internal combustion engine vehicles to hybrid electric.

Alexander Burton 

Australia

Shuimu Breathing

A medical support device for chronic respiratory disease patients, providing guidance for inhaler use. 

Fang Yuan and Zhang Mouwei

China

The Golden Capsule

A non-electric medicine-injection device for emergencies. 

Shin Young Hwan, Chae Yoo Jin, Bai Yuan, Kim Dae Yeon 

Korea

The Life Chariot

An off-road trailer for medics in conflict zones.

Piotr Tłuszcz

Poland

WhaleSafe

A rope-on-demand fishing system that eliminates whale entanglements.

Collin Bolt, Benjamin Beazley and Jake Chateauneuf

Canada

Notes to editors

The James Dyson Foundation

The James Dyson Award forms part of a wider commitment by Sir James Dyson to demonstrate the power of engineers to change the world. The competition has supported nearly 400 inventions with prize money and is run by the James Dyson Foundation, an engineering education charity funded by Dyson profits.

The Dyson Institute of Engineering and Technology and the Foundation’s work encourage aspiring engineers and problem solvers to apply their knowledge and discover new ways to improve lives through technology. To date, James and the James Dyson Foundation have contributed over £140m to boundary-breaking concepts in education and other charitable causes.

About the James Dyson Award

The brief

Design something that solves a problem. This problem may be a frustration that we all face in daily life, or a global issue. The important thing is that the solution is effective and demonstrates considered design thinking.

The process

Entries are judged first at the national level by a panel of external judges and a Dyson engineer. Each operating market awards a national winner and two national runners-up. From these winners, a panel of Dyson engineers then select an international shortlist of 20 entries. The Top 20 shortlist projects are then reviewed by Sir James Dyson who selects his international winners.

*The prize

• International winners, chosen by Sir James Dyson, awarded up to NZ$57,000.

• Each National winner receives NZ$9,500.

Further FAQs can be found on the James Dyson Award website.

*Totals approximate and calculated according to the latest exchange rates.

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