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Title
Digital Health Institute hosts an interdisciplinary workshop on wearables and assistive care technology
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general
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886a8330a46847169e37a4d0ddc5aeb6
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https://engineering.rice.edu/news/digital-health-institute-hosts-interdisciplina...
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https://engineering.rice.edu/news-events
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T20:01:12+00:00
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Digital Health Institute hosts an interdisciplinary workshop on wearables and assistive care technology

Source: https://engineering.rice.edu/news/digital-health-institute-hosts-interdisciplinary-workshop-wearables-and-assistive-care Parent: https://engineering.rice.edu/news-events

Mar. 19, 2026

POSTED IN: RICE ENGINEERING

News

Digital Health Institute hosts an interdisciplinary workshop on wearables and assistive care technology

Clinicians and researchers gathered to identify unmet clinical needs and solutions for home-based care.

The Digital Health Institute, a strategic partnership between Houston Methodist Hospital and Rice University to transform health care through innovation, hosted the inaugural ‘Biowear Workshop: Wearables and Assistive Technologies’ at the BioScience Research Collaborative on March 6, 2026. The goal of this one-day workshop was to gather clinicians and engineers from Houston Methodist and Rice to discuss unmet needs and innovative solutions for patients requiring ongoing home-based care. 

“My goal in organizing this workshop was to create a forum for close interdisciplinary interactions — where engineers can gain a deeper understanding of the tracking parameters that provide most benefit to patients and their caregivers, and conversely, where clinicians can learn about the latest digital health technologies that Rice engineers are developing and to assess their use for clinical applications,” said Juliane Sempionatto, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at Rice University’s George R. Brown School of Engineering and Computing. “Engaging and working closely with clinicians has been crucial for driving my research forward and I wanted to provide a platform that can foster more collaborations for digital health researchers in the area.” 

The event included talks and panel discussions by faculty on wearable biosensors, rehabilitation technologies, remote monitoring, and assistive technologies as well as poster presentations and short lightning talks by students and trainees from Rice, Houston Methodist, and University of Houston. 

Across these sessions, a clear theme emerged: advancing digital health requires close collaboration among patients, clinicians, and researchers. Speakers emphasized that patient-centered approaches can improve compliance and outcomes, while the rapid growth of continuous monitoring systems calls for better ways to identify meaningful clinical insights from large volumes of data. They also highlighted the need for technologies that give clinicians real-time access to patient data, particularly for managing high-risk chronic conditions such as hypertension and seizures.

The following three students received top honors for their posters: 

The following students received honors for 3-minute Lightning Talks: 

“In its first year, this workshop exceeded expectations—both in the quality of research presented and in the enthusiasm and collaboration among participants, which I hope will lead to many fruitful partnerships,” Sempionatto said. “Its success is also reflected in an invitation to publish a review of the proceedings, helping clinicians and digital health researchers worldwide build similar interdisciplinary collaborations.”

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