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NCD Challenge Draws
Bead on Non-Communicable Diseases
October 9, 2011
The
NCD Challenge is a competition among a number of the world's leading
universities designed to tap the inventiveness of students to find new
ways to address the rise of non-communicable diseases in both developing
and developed countries.
Illnesses such as heart disease, stroke, cancer, asthma and diabetes are
a global growing health concern with a far-reaching impact on the
world's healthcare systems. The NCD Challenge is engaging teams of
university students and faculty to design creative and entrepreneurial
solutions to this growing problem.
According to the World Health Organization, nearly two-thirds of all
deaths occur due to non-communicable diseases, of which almost 80
percent are in developing countries. Over the coming decade, some 388
million people worldwide will die of one or more chronic illnesses.
However, with concerted action, research and new innovations, at least
36 million premature deaths could be averted by 2015.
Competing teams in the NCD Challenge will have a broad range of
flexibility to develop new solutions that can scale to support both
large and small populations in developing and developed countries. Each
will compete to create new ways to promote disease awareness, to use
technology to combat NCDs, and promote more efficient ways to provide
care. The teams are supported by IBM and Novartis with mentors and
subject matter coaching to provide industry expertise that will
complement their knowledge and research.
IBM
and Novartis created the competition to bring together industry and
academia and act as a catalyst for new thinking in this area.
"Encouraging innovation and engaging university teams to address the
unmet needs of millions of patients affected by chronic illness could
have a far-reaching impact on our healthcare system," said Katherine
Holland, general manager, IBM Life Sciences. "IBM and Novartis are
jointly sponsoring this competition to encourage the creation of new
solutions that will make a difference to one of the world's major health
epidemics."
Universities participating in the competition include: University of
California, Berkeley Haas School of Business; Duke University School of
Medicine; Schulich School of Business; University of Melbourne; London
Business School; Said Business School, University of Oxford; University
of Fribourg, in collaboration with Inselspital Bern; Karolinska
Institutet; Copenhagen Business School; and Jordan University.
The competition will run through December 9, 2011. Winners will be
announced in January. |