Rice 360° in running for $100 million MacArthur grant

David Ruth
713-348-6327
david@rice.edu

Jade Boyd
713-348-6778
jadeboyd@rice.edu

Rice 360° in running for $100 million MacArthur grant

Global health program’s Africa project is 100&Change semifinalist

HOUSTON — (Feb. 15, 2017) — At current rates of progress, it will take more than 150 years before a baby born in Africa has the same chance of survival as one born in the United States, but an international team of global health experts has mapped out a plan to do it in 10 years. All it needs to get started is $100 million.

Malawi baby on Pumani machine

A premature baby (left) undergoes treatment with a low-cost neonatal continuous positive airway pressure, or CPAP, at Zomba District Hospital in Malawi. The machine, which was designed by Rice undergraduates, is today saving children in 24 countries. (Photo by Brandon Martin/Rice University)

The Rice University-based team’s odds of getting the money increased to one-in-eight with today’s announcement that Rice 360° Institute for Global Health and its partners are among the semifinalists for the MacArthur Foundation’s innovative 100&Change competition. A $100 million grant will be awarded to a single proposal that promises to make measurable progress toward solving one of the world’s significant problems. The eight semifinalists announced today were selected from more than 1,900 applicants. The foundation plans to select the winner this fall.

“A million African babies die each year, and we know that 85 percent of those deaths could be prevented with relatively simple technologies that keep babies warm, help them breathe and help doctors diagnose and manage infections and other conditions,” said Rice 360° Director Rebecca Richards-Kortum, who is leading a team that includes physicians, engineers and business and entrepreneurial experts from three continents.

Rice 360° group in Blantyre, Malawi

Rice 360°’s Rebecca Richards-Kortum and Maria Oden (fourth and fifth from left) with doctors, nurses, collaborators and Rice University Provost Marie Lynn Miranda (second from right) and NEST collaborator and Malawi College of Medicine pediatrician Josephine Langton (right) at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. (Photo by Brandon Martin/Rice University)

Dr. Queen Dube, a clinical pediatric specialist at Malawi’s largest hospital and faculty member at the University of Malawi College of Medicine, said, “We have the human workforce trained in all these interventions, but the technology is lacking. Every morning you go to work full of this knowledge, knowing what actually works, and then you come to work and you’re confronted with 50 or 60 babies. You don’t have the right technology. You cannot do that which you were trained to do, and a baby dies in front of you. It’s very frustrating.”

Rice 360° began working with Dube and other African partners 10 years ago to design robust, inexpensive machines and technologies specifically for African hospitals. The group’s efforts have attracted national and international awards and set the stage for Rice 360°’s bold 100&Change plan to develop and implement a 17-piece Newborn Essential Solutions and Technologies (NEST) package — an integrated group of life-saving neonatal technologies.

Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital

Rice 360° has long collaborated with doctors and nurses at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi, to create, refine and implement neonatal technologies specifically designed for African hospitals. (Photo by Brandon Martin/Rice University)

Rice 360° co-director Maria Oden, an engineering educator who has trained hundreds of Rice students to solve global health problems, said, “Every hospital I’ve visited in sub-Saharan Africa has a room I call the equipment graveyard, which is filled with expensive, donated medical equipment that is broken beyond repair simply because it was not designed to work in Africa.”

Oden said the idea for NEST grew from Rice 360°’s efforts to develop and implement appropriate technologies, like a breathing machine that’s now used in more than 20 countries, and from its increasingly global collaboration with experts in London, California, Illinois and countries throughout sub-Saharan Africa.

The breathing machine, called the Pumani bCPAP, was licensed by NEST team member 3rd Stone Design of San Rafael, Calif., and is now on the market in Sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and Latin America.

Baby on Pumani bubble CPAP

The Rice 360°-developed Pumani bubble CPAP machine has more than doubled the survival rate of Malawian newborns with severe respiratory illness. (Image courtesy of Rice 360°/Rice University)

“In working alongside Rice 360° to refine, produce and launch the Pumani, we’ve now been able to bring a much-needed product to clinicians around the world,” said Robert Miros, CEO of 3rd Stone Design. “It’s a huge step for low-cost medical technologies to actually make it to market, and with this proposal, we can pave the way for a suite of neonatal technologies to scale.”

NEST collaborator Kara Palamountain, a faculty member at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, said, “The key to this project’s success does not lie with any one technology. To end preventable newborn deaths in Africa, we must provide access to comprehensive care. The NEST bundle of technologies will enable that holistic care, and there are clear efficiencies in developing and commercializing these technologies as a bundle of goods.”

NEST collaborator Joy Lawn, professor and director of the MARCH (Maternal, Adolescent, Reproductive and Child Health) Centre at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said, “The 17 technologies, when paired with appropriate clinical care, could prevent most newborn deaths in Africa. Our team already has more than half of those products in the late stages of development.”

NEST technologies

A list of the 17 NEST technologies. (Image courtesy of Rice 360°/Rice University)

The Rice 360°-led consortium enables each partner to contribute its unique expertise toward the goal. Lawn, a pediatrician with more than 25 years of clinical and research experience in Africa, will lead efforts to evaluate the impact of NEST technologies. Theresa Mkandawire, dean of engineering at the University of Malawi Polytechnic, and Oden will use existing twinned undergraduate design studios at Rice and Malawi Polytechnic to develop and refine prototypes for clinical study and evaluation. Dube and fellow pediatricians Elizabeth Molyneux and Josephine Langton will oversee clinical studies and evaluation at the University of Malawi College of Medicine. Palamountain will focus on determining user needs, obtaining feedback about prototypes and developing commercialization plans. Finally, 3rd Stone Design will lead efforts to manufacture and gain regulatory approval for NEST technologies.

Oden said the group is committed to ending preventable newborn deaths in Africa and to creating a culture of biomedical innovation there. “There are key educational and entrepreneurial components that will ensure that NEST technologies can eventually be locally sourced, produced and repaired,” she said. “More importantly, they’ll also prepare a cadre of young entrepreneurs who are ready to lead the next generation of global health care innovation in Africa.”

The Chicago-based John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation is one of the nation’s largest independent foundations. It supports creative people, effective institutions and influential networks building a more just, verdant and peaceful world.

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VIDEOs about Rice 360°’s NEST:

Improving Newborn Survival in Africa
https://youtu.be/gQ-NIorX5DI

MacArthur 100&Change: Rice 360º
https://youtu.be/o_WJDA1EgT4

Additional VIDEOs about Rice 360° in Malawi:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLdyZjWkoCPVvbSVKSFjE9Mz_O3tWcqa5-

High-resolution IMAGES are available for download at:

http://news.rice.edu/files/2017/02/0215_MAC100-babies-lg-zj2lci.jpg
CAPTION: A premature baby (left) undergoes treatment with a low-cost neonatal continuous positive airway pressure, or CPAP, at Zomba District Hospital in Malawi. The machine, which was designed by Rice undergraduates, is today saving children in 24 countries. (Photo by Brandon Martin/Rice University)

http://news.rice.edu/files/2017/02/0215_MAC100-group-lg-xpthxr.jpg
CAPTION: Rice 360°’s Rebecca Richards-Kortum and Maria Oden (fourth and fifth from left, respectively) with doctors, nurses, collaborators and Rice University Provost Marie Lynn Miranda (second from right) and NEST collaborator and Malawi College of Medicine pediatrician Josephine Langton (right) at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. (Photo by Brandon Martin/Rice University)

http://news.rice.edu/files/2017/02/0215_MAC100-pumani-lg-twt9fb.jpg
CAPTION: The Rice 360°-developed Pumani bubble CPAP machine has more than doubled the survival rate of Malawian newborns with severe respiratory illness. (Image courtesy of Rice 360°/Rice University)

http://news.rice.edu/files/2017/02/0215_MAC100-qech-lg-1cqjugu.jpg
CAPTION: Rice 360° has long collaborated with doctors and nurses at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi, to create, refine and implement neonatal technologies specifically designed for African hospitals. (Photo by Brandon Martin/Rice University)

http://news.rice.edu/files/2017/02/0215_MAC100-17-med-22gi8hq.jpg
CAPTION: A list of the 17 NEST technologies. (Image courtesy of Rice 360°/Rice University)

MacArthur Foundation 100&Change home page: https://www.100andchange.org/

Rice 360°’s 100&Change: https://www.macfound.org/Rice360

Richards-Kortum, Oden, Palamountain: All babies deserve a chance to live — Houston Chronicle, Nov. 18, 2016
http://www.rice360.rice.edu/single-post/2016/11/18/Richards-Kortum-Oden-Palamountain-All-Babies-Deserve-a-Chance-to-Survive

Rice 360°’s Neonatal Essential Solutions and Technologies (NEST):
http://www.rice360.rice.edu/nest

How good design can save 1 million babies per year — Rice Magazine, Winter 2017:
http://magazine.rice.edu/2017/01/breathe-easy-repeat/

Rice 360° home page: http://www.rice360.rice.edu/

Related press releases from Rice News:

Rice’s Richards-Kortum named MacArthur Fellow — Sept. 22, 2016
http://news.rice.edu/2016/09/22/rices-rebecca-richards-kortum-named-macarthur-fellow-2/

Rice 360° wins key funding for low-cost syringe pump — Aug. 17, 2016
http://news.rice.edu/2016/08/17/rice-360o-wins-key-funding-for-low-cost-syringe-pump/

Rice, Malawi Polytechnic partner to create innovative technologies — April 7, 2015
http://news.rice.edu/2015/04/07/rice-malawi-polytechnic-partner-to-create-innovative-technologies-2/

UNICEF report features Rice’s Nursery of the Future — Nov. 19, 2014
http://news.rice.edu/2014/11/19/unicef-report-features-rices-nursery-of-the-future/

Clinical study finds bubble CPAP boosts neonatal survival rates — Jan. 29, 2014
http://news.rice.edu/2014/01/29/clinical-study-finds-bubble-cpap-boosts-neonatal-survival-rates/

Prize will expand use of life-saving neonatal device in Africa — Nov. 14, 2013
http://news.rice.edu/2013/11/14/prize-will-expand-use-of-life-saving-neonatal-device-in-africa-2/

Rice U. professors share Lemelson-MIT Award, donate prize money — May 1, 2013
http://news.rice.edu/2013/05/01/rice-u-professors-share-lemelson-mit-award-donate-prize-money/

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About Jade Boyd

Jade Boyd is science editor and associate director of news and media relations in Rice University's Office of Public Affairs.