Project:
Rumeesa Rais, MSc MedTech, Innovation & Entrepreneurship – £3,000 Engineers in Business Prize
Rumeesa won her Engineers in Business prize for her innovation, Heard, a wearable language translation device to support healthcare and overcome multilingual communication barriers in a variety of settings. Heard’s focus is to improve the quality of healthcare delivery by combating language barriers.
Rumeesa explained: “International migration has risen over the past 20 years and communities that have English as a second language face lower-quality of healthcare services due to linguistic discordance. Our focus is addressing sustainable development goals (SDGs) of good health and well-being, reducing inequalities, and partnership for the goals. Through using Neural Machine Translation (NMT), a software of two-way seamless translation can occur no matter the language spoken. The future of Heard could look like a smart, wearable device that can be clipped on the ear during patient visits.
Karyn Sansom, NYT Ltd, mentor of the competition winner Heard said: “It was a pleasure working with Rumeesa, and such a wonderful opportunity to observe such a ground-breaking undertaking by Kings College. The opportunity for students to develop their entrepreneurial skills and business acumen while studying engineering is truly amazing. It’ll be great to see adoption across engineering courses across the country if not in place already. I hope King’s College develops this into a yearly event.”
Pictured left to right are finalist Mei Tuson (PhD Student in the Faculty of Natural, Engineering & Mathematical Science) winner Rumessa Rais and the second finalist, Ed James (MSc Robotics).