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Design team wins NIH prize for AI-powered hemorrhagic shock device 

October 15, 2025
Team members Vivien Jiang, Ella Holtermann, and Isabella Godfrey accept award at BMES.

A team of undergraduate biomedical engineering students has won the Krosnick Prize at the National Institute of Health’s 2025 Design by Biomedical Undergraduate Teams (DEBUT) Challenge for a new device that helps doctors quickly recognize hemorrhagic shock in pediatric patients. The award recognizes exceptional undergraduate innovations in biomedical design that are producing technological solutions to a broad spectrum of unmet health needs.

Managed by the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB) and VentureWell, the team, named ShockSense, received a $20,000 prize at the Biomedical Engineering Society (BMES) annual conference on October 10 in San Diego, CA.

Hemorrhagic shock is one of the leading causes of preventable death in pediatric trauma, yet early detection remains difficult. The current assessment tool requires clinicians to perform mental math in a constantly changing trauma environment.

To solve this problem, the ShockSense team developed a real-time decision support device that automates shock recognition while improving accuracy. The device can be integrated with any hospital monitor and uses information available in the trauma bay to display color-coded risk levels and a patient’s shock status.

“ShockSense gives clinicians the information they need the moment they need it with improved sensitivity and precision compared to the gold standard so they can save lives,” said biomedical engineering senior and team lead Eleanor Holtermann.

By streamlining high-pressure decisions, their device aims to close a critical diagnostic gap in pediatric emergency care.

This year’s DEBUT Challenge was one of the largest and most competitive with 123 applications from 67 universities in 24 states, and 534 students participating altogether.

The team will continue work on the project this semester in the Department of Biomedical Engineering’s Advanced Design Team Course. Additional team members include: Isabella Godfrey, Loren Ayers, Vivien Jiang, Apple Wu, Aditya Sinha, Elizabeth Zuerblis, and Ashrith Kollu. The team mentors are Constanza Miranda, associate teaching professor, and Dr. Mark Slidell, associate professor of surgery in the Johns Hopkins Department of Pediatric Surgery.

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