Furthermore, the State Secretariat for Education, Research, and Innovation (SERI) in Switzerland and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) in the United Kingdom support this action with additional CHF 1.28 million and £530,000, respectively.
The consortium and associated partners will enable 16 Ph.D. students around Europe, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland to receive comprehensive, structured training with a well-designed curriculum and research plan, on-site courses and workshops, project meetings, and research rotations throughout Europe, the United States of America, and Canada. The goal is to bring combinatorial spinal cord injury therapies from the laboratory to the bedside on time while developing new approaches to regenerate the spinal cord after injury.
"We jointly assembled an internationally renowned team of researchers dedicated to improving the lives of people after spinal cord injury, each with their core expertise in scar tissue modulation, regenerative biomaterials, neuroprosthetics, and robotics. By joining forces, we aim to fill gaps in traditional education programs and advance research and development expertise for medical products and therapies. This doctoral network will contribute significantly to bringing Europe to the forefront of spinal cord injury therapy" says Prof. Dr.-Ing. Laura De Laporte, Member of the Scientific Board at the DWI-Leibniz Institute for Interactive Materials and coordinator of ReWIRE.
"We are thrilled to participate in this exciting program with leading institutions for spinal cord research. We have already hired a Ph.D. candidate who is working on closed-loop control modalities for spinal cord stimulation in a jointly supervised project by RWTH Aachen University (Aachen, Germany), EPFL (Lausanne, Switzerland) and CHUV (Lausanne, Switzerland)”, said Joachim von Zitzewitz, Director Systems Engineering of ONWARD.
MEDICA-tradefair.com; Source: DWI - Leibniz-Institut für Interaktive Materialien