Ronan honoured with major award at international event for his innovative medicine dispenser project
Ronan Lyons made a triumphant return to school having won the Broadcom Foundation Award at the ISEF international special awards in Phoenix Arizona. Ronan is pictured being congratulated by principal Hazel Hannon.
A Lanesboro student has won a major international award thanks to his invention, which was designed to make taking medicine easier for people with hand-mobility issues.
Ronan Lyons, from Lanesboro Community College, received the prestigious Broadcom Coding with Commitment Award at the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona, for his project CAPILL – Compliance Aid Promoting Independent Living Long-Term.
The award, presented at the world’s largest pre-college science competition, carries prize winnings of $10,000.
Ronan first captured attention when he won the regional SciFest competition held at TUS Athone in April 2025.
His project is an innovative medicine dispenser designed to improve medication compliance, safety and independent living for people managing long-term conditions and hand-mobility difficulties.
Describing the invention, Ronan said the project was: “A four-levelled dispenser that used a series of stepper motors to drop medication into an ergonomic cup that is presented when the patient’s fingerprint is scanned.” In the abstract accompanying his project, Ronan explained: “This compliance aid will make taking medicines easier and safer for the estimated 460,000 people in Ireland that suffer from conditions that have a large effect on hand mobility, such as rheumatism, arthritis and neurological conditions such as Parkinson’s Disease.

“Most readily available blister packages and compliance aids require fine motor skills to remove the tablets from their packaging.
“I plan to make medicine compliance easier with my dispenser CAPILL as it drops the medicines into a specially designed ergonomic cup.” Ronan also acknowledged the support he received while developing the project, thanking staff from the Faculty of Engineering and Informatics at TUS.
The Broadcom Coding with Commitment Award, sponsored by the Broadcom Foundation, recognises projects that use technology and innovation to address real-world societal challenges.
Regeneron ISEF, which ran from May 9th -15th in Phoenix, brought together more than 1,700 students from over 60 countries, regions and territories to compete for more than $7 million in awards and prizes.

