Grant extends reach of low cost 3D-printed hands, back braces to Canadian kids
VICTORIA — Nick Dechev says amputees randomly show up at his laboratory at the University of Victoria and ask for help.
Dechev, a mechanical engineering professor and executive director of the Victoria Hand Project, said most times he can offer them assistance from the lab, which designs 3D-printed prosthetic hands.
Over the next three years, he expects to help 200 more amputees and 160 children with scoliosis, a curvature of the spine, using 3D-printed technology developed in Victoria.
Dechev said a $1 million grant announced Tuesday will help the university’s engineers expand production of the low-cost prosthetic hands and test and provide scoliosis braces to help people in communities where artificial limbs and back braces are difficult to get in Canada and the United States.