Students from Clarksburg High School and University of Maryland Awarded Top Prizes in Maryland Innovate 4 Health Challenge

Winning Projects on Vaccinations and Preventing Pre-Diabetes in Children Honored by CHIDS, Maryland HealthTech Coalition and MdBio Foundation

ROCKVILLE, Md.--()--Anurudh Ganesan from Clarksburg High School in Montgomery County and Junaed Siddiqui, a Ph.D. student at the University of Maryland (UMD) were selected as winners of the Maryland Innovate 4 Health Challenge, which took place as part of the Maryland Health IT Conference & Expo yesterday at the Anne Arundel Medical Center in Annapolis. Winners each took home a cash prize totaling more than $5,000. The Challenge was organized by the Center for Health Information and Decision Systems (CHIDS) at UMD's Robert H. Smith School of Business, Maryland Health Tech Coalition, Howard Community College and MdBio Foundation, Inc.

“The level of competition and creativity that these teams displayed was inspiring,” said Brian Gaines, CEO of the MdBio Foundation. “It’s marvelous when students can bring a fresh perspective and innovative thinking to address a national or global health challenge. When considering the effort and serious consideration of health issues that went into these projects, the future indeed looks bright.”

The Challenge – which focused on a theme of “Empowering Patients, Providers and Community with Creative plus Usable Solutions” – gave participants the opportunity to develop a solution (set of tools, processes and technologies coupled with a business strategy) that could improve patient and/or population health, program management, and/or reduce costs.

Ganesan, who was mentored by Sheila Weiss, Ph.D., chief science officer and vice president of Research at DrugLogic, Inc., won for the VAXXWAGON, which focuses on innovative vaccine delivery solutions. Siddiqui, who is a student in the Department of Behavioral and Community Health at the UMD School of Public Health, was honored for E-Puffin, a mobile app designed to eliminate pre-diabetes in kids by using behavioral economics strategies coupled with a smartphone application and sensors.

The judges in the challenge also named one runner-up each in the high school and college categories. The River Hill High School in Howard County – comprised of Madisyn Steinberg, Hafeeza Mughal, Taylor Younkins, Narayani Wagle and Bianca Brade, and mentored by Roxanne Zaghab, director of operations and business development at the Center for Innovative Pharmacy Solutions at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy – developed Farm2Family, which focuses on access to healthy food and nutrition tailored for disease prevention and management. A team from Prince George’s Community College – which included John Harlepas, Anthony Rozario and Melissa Marquez, and was mentored by Lauren Weissbrod, regional business development manager at Synaptic Advisory Partners – showcased SAFI, a novel 3-D printed pediatric oral hygiene device.

Judges for the competition included Adnan Ahmed, president of CNSI; M. Jason Brooke, CEO of Vasoptic Medical, Inc.; P. Kenyon Crowley, Deputy Director of CHIDS; and Brian Gaines, CEO of the MdBio Foundation.

Diamondback sponsor CNSI supported the Challenge. The project also was funded in part by the State of Maryland’s EARN Program, administered by the Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation.

The competition is part of a wider EARN-supported initiative – dubbed “mHealth-focused Health Tech Strategic Industry Partnership (SIP)”– aimed at economic and workforce development in Maryland. This SIP’s programs, with industry partners, target Maryland healthcare workers, IT specialists, transitioning veterans and executives who play various roles important to fostering Maryland’s health technology ecosystem.

About CHIDS

The Center for Health Information and Decision Systems (CHIDS) is an academic research center based in the Department of Decision, Operations & Information Technology (DO&IT) at the Robert H. Smith School of Business that collaborates closely with industry, government, and other key health system stakeholders. CHIDS’ research seeks to understand how digital technologies can be more effectively deployed to address outcomes such as patient safety, healthcare quality, efficiency in healthcare delivery, and a reduction in health disparities. CHIDS offers the benefit of renowned scholars in healthcare analytics and modeling, technology innovation, adoption, implementation, innovation, and design. The pool of talent, knowledge and expertise in DO&IT is acknowledged by several publications as a top-5 performer in research production worldwide; the Information Systems group is ranked in the top-10 worldwide by Businessweek and U.S. News and World Report. CHIDS pioneers in the study of digitally enabled health system transformation and is widely known for its thought leadership and research collaborations.

About the Maryland HealthTech Coalition

The Maryland HealthTech Coalition is a grassroots effort to promote an ecosystem in the Maryland region that fosters health technology innovation, investment, and growth through public and private collaboration, mentorship, leadership, and engagement. For more information, visit www.mdhealthtech.org.

About MdBio Foundation

MdBio Foundation is a charitable non-profit organization that provides innovative, effective, and experiential STEM education opportunities with a focus on bioscience. The Foundation’s interdisciplinary approach uses science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) to explore real-world, problem-centric curriculum that bridges school, community, health, and business. MdBio Foundation’s flagship education program MdBioLab, a mobile laboratory for high schools, has provided quality educational experiences to more than 110,000 students throughout the state of Maryland since its launch in 2003. The Foundation also operates other celebrated STEM education programs such as the Young Science Explorers Program for middle school students, the Maryland BioGENEius Award, and ATLAS: Advancing Tomorrow’s Leaders + STEM college and career symposia. For more information, visit www.mdbiofoundation.org.

Contacts

Media Contact:
Brad Wills for MdBio Foundation
240-752-7171
bwills@wills-pr.com

Release Summary

Innovate 4 Health Challenge awards students from Clarksburg High School and University of Maryland top prizes in Maryland competition.

Contacts

Media Contact:
Brad Wills for MdBio Foundation
240-752-7171
bwills@wills-pr.com