Need a Hand? How 3-D Printing and Online Networks Can Help the World's DisabledTop of Mind with Julie Rose • Season 1, Episode 609, Segment 6
Aug 3, 2017 • 12m
(originally aired March 28, 2017)
Guest: Dr. Jon Schull, PhD, Director of RIT’s MAGIC Center, Founder of the e-NABLE Movement
Every year roughly 1,500 babies in the US are born missing all or part of an arm. Simple activities like getting dressed or opening a door can be a challenge for these children. But a prosthetic hand can cost tens of thousands of dollars and kids tend to out-grow them in a few years.
Enter the e-NABLE movement: a fast-growing network of more than 6000 volunteers that use 3-D printers to create custom-made prosthetics for less than $50. The movement has already provided about 2,000 prosthetics for people in more than 40 countries.