Breaking the Glass Ceiling : How Isabella Morgan is Engineering a New Era for Women in MedTech
NEW YORK, NY — In the male-dominated intersection of mechanical engineering and surgical robotics, Isabella Morgan is not just participating—she is leading. At only 28years old, the Panamanian-born biomedical engineer and inventor is carving out a legacy at Sinai BioDesign, Mount Sinai’s high-stakes medical technology incubator, where she is proving that women have a vital role in the future of neurosurgery.
A Visionary Architect of Change
Isabella’s journey is a masterclass in breaking barriers. After earning her B.S. in Biomedical Engineering from the University of Southern California (USC) with a rigorous emphasis on mechanical engineering, she entered a field where female voices have historically been underrepresented. By training alongside both medical students and elite engineers, Morgan developed a unique “interdisciplinary empathy,” allowing her to see solutions that others missed.

Before her 25th birthday, she was already a key player in a global collaboration with a leading surgical robotics company, helping develop an ophthalmic surgery platform for clinical trials. Today, she stands as a powerful example of what happens when young women are given the tools to innovate at the highest levels of healthcare.
The Periscope Kit: An Invention for the Vulnerable
Morgan’s most profound achievement is her role as Project Lead and Co-Inventor of the Periscope Kit. This groundbreaking device tackles a “clinical dilemma” that has long plagued the treatment of subdural hematomas, particularly in elderly patients.
For decades, the choice was binary: a highly invasive, risky surgery or a less effective, “wait-and-see” approach. Morgan refused to accept this compromise. Her invention—the Periscope Kit—merges the safety of minimally invasive procedures with the life-saving efficacy of traditional surgery.
Her leadership on this project was total. Morgan personally:
Engineered the Vision: Designed every CAD and technical drawing through years of iterative prototyping.
Proven Results: Built a custom phantom model to quantify the device’s performance, ensuring the data met the highest clinical standards.
Navigated the Future: Developed a Navigation Functionality system to give surgeons the “eyes” they need during delicate procedures.
A Decorated Leader and Mentor
Morgan’s excellence has earned her the prestigious Mount Sinai i3 Prism Award, an honor reserved for innovators who demonstrate exceptional talent in developing high-impact, product-driven medical solutions. This award underscores her status not just as an engineer, but as a MedTech entrepreneur capable of navigating the complex road to FDA approval.
As a Panamanian woman in New York, Isabella represents a global shift in leadership. Her presence in the lab and the operating room serves as a beacon for the next generation of girls in STEM, proving that technical mastery and entrepreneurial grit are not bound by gender or geography.
About Isabella Morgan
Isabella Morgan is a New York-based biomedical engineer, inventor, and entrepreneur. A graduate of USC, she currently leads surgical innovation projects at Sinai BioDesign. Her work focuses on robotic intervention and neurosurgical advancements, with a mission to make life-saving technology safer, smarter, and more inclusive.
Disclaimer: Written in partnership with APG.