Eyal Stern

New Product Introduction Engineer at OSSIO

Eyal Stern is a New Product Introduction Engineer currently working at OSSIO since 2023, with extensive experience in the field, including previous roles at Medtronic, B.Y. Medimor Ltd., Check-Cap Ltd., Vishay Intertechnology, Inc., and Iscar. Eyal possesses strong expertise in managing engineering change orders, leading sustain engineering processes, and performing process validation for production lines. Skills include working with supply chain management and collaborating with R&D and Quality teams to enhance product manufacturability and reliability. Eyal holds a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering from the Technion and a Master of Business Administration from The Open University of Israel.

Location

Haifa, Israel

Links

Previous companies


Org chart

No direct reports

Teams


Offices

This person is not in any offices


OSSIO

OSSIO is an orthopedic fixation company committed to transforming the orthopedic experience for patients, physicians, and payors. Their vision is to provide the first credible replacement to metal implants in the $10B+ orthopedic fixation market (screws, pins, plates) with an Intelligent Bone Regeneration Technology. OSSIOfiber represents abreakthrough material platform for orthopedic and podiatric surgeons who seek a more biologically friendly way to restore patient stability and mobility with nothing permanent left behind.Founded in 2014, OSSIO began as the culmination of years of biomechanical research and a vision for the possibility of better bone healing. The technological basis of OSSIOfiber™ was developed and would lay the groundwork for ushering in a new breakthrough category of non-permanent fixation, “Bio-Integratives” hardware that has both desired strength AND bio-friendliness. Hardware that has the mechanical strength for easy insertion and secure fixation, while enabling the body to regrow bone, incorporating and replacing the implant (without the adverse inflammation and weakness often seen in “bio-resorbables and other “bio-composites”), has remained elusive to the industry until now.


Employees

51-200

Links