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How can urban residents design and live in environments that promote physical and mental health?

Healthy Cities

Closed

Submissions are closed

Timeline

  • Applications Open

    January 2, 2019 12:00am EST
  • Solution Deadline

    February 28, 2019 11:59pm EST
  • Challenges Open

    February 28, 2019 11:59pm EST
  • Deadline to Submit a Draft Solution at 5:00pm ET

    July 1, 2019 11:59pm EDT
  • Challenges Closed

    July 22, 2019 11:59pm EDT
  • Final Revisions Due by 9:00am ET

    July 22, 2019 11:59pm EDT
  • Solve Challenge Finals

    September 22, 2019 11:59pm EDT

Challenge Overview

By 2050, two-thirds of the world’s population, or 6.7 billion people, will reside in cities, some of which are yet to be built. Urban migration is a chance for many to improve their lives, with easier access to goods and services, and higher-paying jobs. But living in cities and slums exposes residents to serious health risks. Nine out of ten of the top causes of death globally, including chronic respiratory disease, diarrheal diseases, and traffic incidents, are affected by the way cities are planned and built. By keeping health at the center of urban development, we have the opportunity to improve the health, happiness, and longevity of billions of citizens globally.

Today’s urban and slum residents face a multitude of challenges to their physical and mental well-being. Densely populated slums, home to one-third of the world’s urban population, have underdeveloped infrastructure and sanitation systems and are breeding grounds for infectious disease and vector-borne illnesses. Living in urban areas can cause or worsen non-communicable diseases: air pollution is linked to heart and lung diseases, and lack of access to nutritious food and green space contribute to obesity and diabetes. Violence, transportation incidents, and overcrowding are major risks to physical safety and mental health.

Cities that promote exercise and healthy eating, incorporate green space, limit traffic and crowds, ensure clean air and water, and make health services easily accessible to those most in need, such as the poor and elderly, are critical to the health of all. These characteristics are also critical to reduce costs for local governments, and increase productivity for businesses. New enterprises, technology, and innovation that address urban health risks are integral to designing, building, and retrofitting cities that make people of all ages and abilities healthier and happier.

The Solve community aims to support solutions focused on improving the mental and physical health of people in cities and slums by:

  • Preventing infectious disease outbreaks and vector-borne illnesses caused by overcrowding, poor sanitation, and dirty water;

  • Reducing the incidence of non-communicable diseases caused by air pollution, lack of physical activity, or unhealthy food;

  • Promoting physical safety by decreasing incidents of violence or transportation accidents; and

  • Enabling equitable access to affordable and effective health services, especially through community health workers and clinics, for those most underserved.


Solver Funding, Prize, and Partnership Eligibility for the Healthy Cities Challenge

Solver Funding

All solutions selected for Solve’s four current Global Challenges will receive a $10,000 grant funded by Solve. Solver teams will be selected by a panel of cross-sector judges at Solve Challenge Finals during UN General Assembly week in New York City on September 22, 2019.

In addition to Solve funding, the following prizes are available to Solver teams selected for the Healthy Cities Challenge. To be considered for a prize, complete the prize-specific question within the application. You do not need to meet these requirements to apply to the Healthy Cities Challenge:

AI Innovations Prize

Solutions that are propelled by advanced computing techniques or that leverage artificial intelligence to address the Challenge are eligible for the AI Innovations Prize. This prize is made possible by The Patrick J. McGovern Foundation and Schmidt Futures. The Patrick J. McGovern Foundation is dedicated to improving the lives of individuals and our global community through neuroscience research and information technology. Schmidt Futures is a philanthropic initiative founded by Eric and Wendy Schmidt that bets early on people who will make our world better — helping people to achieve more for others by applying advanced science and technology thoughtfully and by working together across fields. Up to $500,000 will be granted across several recipients selected for the prize. Eligible Solver teams may be selected from any of Solve's four current Global Challenges.

Innovating Together for Healthy Cities Prize

The Innovating Together for Healthy Cities Prize is open to projects that focus on preventing or managing infectious disease or vector-borne illness in cities or slums. To achieve its goal, the selected solution could, for example, leverage technology, a new application of an existing technology, or a process innovation that improves coordination, communication, or systems efficiency to achieve its goal. Solutions that take a holistic or multifaceted approach to solving the problem (for example, by integrating elements from disparate sectors) are strongly preferred. To be considered, solutions must discuss how community engagement has been central to their design process. This prize is made possible by Abu Dhabi Crown Prince’s global health initiative, which is committed to eliminating preventable diseases that affect the world’s poorest and most vulnerable communities. One prize recipient will receive $75,000 after being selected as a Solver during Solve Challenge Finals in September.

Everytown for Gun Safety Prize

Holistic, community-based solutions that use technology to make communities safer are eligible for up to $100,000 in grant funding provided by Everytown for Gun Safety Support Fund. Selected solutions will contribute to reductions in gun violence and its impacts through the use of data or digital technology. Successful approaches can address the upstream drivers of gun violence, such as poverty or access to firearms, and/or the downstream impacts, such as psychological trauma. Solutions that utilize data should source, maintain, and use that data ethically and responsibly. Solver team(s) will be selected to receive the prize from the Healthy Cities or Community-Driven Innovation Challenges.

Innovation for Women Prize

Solutions that use innovative technology to improve the quality of life for women and girls are eligible for the Innovation for Women Prize. This prize is funded by the Vodafone Americas Foundation, which supports technology-focused projects to advance the needs of women and girls, and to promote a world where women’s voices can be celebrated. Up to $75,000 will be granted across up to three Solver teams selected to receive the prize. Eligible Solver teams may be selected from any of Solve's four current Global Challenges.

Innospark Ventures Prize

The Innospark Ventures Prize is open to AI-based solutions from across the cybersecurity, education, healthcare, life sciences, and business services sectors focused in the United States. The prize is funded by Innospark Ventures, which invests in founders and ideas that leverage advanced artificial intelligence to create a differential and disruptive impact for our economy and society. Up to $100,000 will be granted to up to four eligible Solver teams from across any of Solve's current Global Challenges.

UN Women She Innovates Prize for Gender-Responsive Innovation

Solutions that are women-led or use innovation to advance the needs of women and girls are eligible for the UN Women She Innovates Prize for Gender-Responsive Innovation, founded by UN Women Global Innovation Coalition for Change and made possible by Johnson & Johnson and EY. Up to $60,000 in She Innovates Prize funding will be provided across two recipients within Solve’s Healthy Cities and Community-Driven Innovation Challenges. Within Solve's Healthy Cities Challenge, Johnson & Johnson — which believes that a good idea can come from anyone, anywhere — will support one prize recipient with up to $30,000 in prize funding. The selected Healthy Cities solution should focus on a life-enhancing, innovative approach to delivering quality healthcare to vulnerable populations, especially through community health workers and clinics.

Judging Criteria

  • Alignment: The solution uses technology to address one of Solve's Global Challenges.
  • Potential for Impact: The planned solution implementation has the potential to impact lives.
  • Feasibility: Solution implementation is feasible, and the team has a plan for financial sustainability.
  • Innovative Approach: The solution includes a new technology, a new application of technology, a new business model, or a new process for solving the Challenge.
  • Scalability: The solution can be scaled to affect the lives of more people.
  • Partnership Potential: The applicant clearly explains how the solution would benefit from the broad range of resources that the Solve community is positioned to provide.

Solutions

Selected

OmniVis

By Katherine Clayton
Katherine Clayton Lynne Cheng
Selected

Salauno: Eye care for all

By Gabriela Hernandez
Gabriela Hernandez Ines Saldivar Javier Okhuysen
Selected

RAAJI

By Saba Khalid
Saba Khalid Jaya Rajwani Sehar Palla Muqadar Ali Jamali
Selected

Faircap Clean Water

By Mauricio Cordova
Mauricio Cordova
Selected

change:WATER Labs—iThrone Evaporative Toilet

By Diana Yousef
Diana Yousef
Selected

CareMother

By Ameya Bondre
Ameya Bondre
Selected

Blue Sky Analytics: Data backbone of a Clean Air Economy

By Abhilasha Purwar
Abhilasha Purwar Prachi Mishra Kshitij Purwar Saheel Ahmed Jashanpreet Singh
Selected

Shape-Up

By Jonathan Jay
Jonathan Jay
Finalist

Say Something Anonymous Reporting System

By Nicole Hockley
Nicole Hockley Tim Makris
Finalist

EatWell Meal Kits

By Dan Wexler
Dan Wexler Kevin Hall Adriana  Katekawa Katherine Yang Rashi Jaiswal Marcus Franklin
Finalist

Majico

By Michael Coto
Michael Coto
Finalist

The Okoa Ambulance Trailer

By Emily Young
Emily Young
Finalist

Kayal

By Priyanka Krishnamoorthy
Priyanka Krishnamoorthy Elijah Hoole Janagan Balasubramaniam Nipuni  Siyambalapitiya
Finalist

Crisis Text Line

By Bob Filbin
Bob Filbin Jana French
Finalist

Neurobots

By Vitor Hazin
Vitor Hazin Julio Dantas

Leadership

Sanjay Sarma

Sanjay Sarma

MIT, Vice President for Open Learning
Katja Iversen

Katja Iversen

Women Deliver, President and CEO
Anjali Sastry

Anjali Sastry

MIT Sloan School of Management, Senior Lecturer, System Dynamics
S. Atyia Martin

S. Atyia Martin

All Aces, Inc., CEO & Founder
Temie Giwa-Tubosun

Temie Giwa-Tubosun

LifeBank, Founder and CEO
Stephen Bittel

Stephen Bittel

Terranova Corp., Chairman & Founder
Elizabeth McGovern

Elizabeth McGovern

Patrick J. McGovern Foundation, Trustee
Hanni Ali

Hanni Ali

Hamilton Insurance Group, SVP, Strategic Partnerships
Carlo Ratti

Carlo Ratti

Founding Partner, Carlo Ratti Associati, Director, MIT Senseable City Lab
Marijke Wijnroks

Marijke Wijnroks

The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, Chief of Staff
Whitney	 Austin Gray

Whitney Austin Gray

Delos Insights, Delos, Senior Vice President
Alaa Murabit

Alaa Murabit

United Nations, UN High-Level Commissioner: Health Employment & Economic Growth; UN SDG Global Advocate
Donald F. Schwarz

Donald F. Schwarz

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Senior Vice President, Program
Ernest Madu

Ernest Madu

Heart Institute of the Caribbean and HIC Heart Hospital, Chairman and Founder
Romina Libster

Romina Libster

Fundacion INFANT/ National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET), Pediatric Investigator
Chinny Ogunro

Chinny Ogunro

Africa Health Holdings, Managing Director
Jennifer Avegno

Jennifer Avegno

City of New Orleans Health Department, Director
Nicholas Suplina

Nicholas Suplina

Everytown for Gun Safety | Judge for Everytown for Gun Safety Prize, Managing Director for Law and Policy
Geoffrey So

Geoffrey So

Novartis Foundation, Head of Strategy & Global Health Policy
Nassar Al Mubarak

Nassar Al Mubarak

Crown Prince Court of Abu Dhabi || Judge for the Health Workforce Innovation Prize, Director, Office of Strategic Affairs
Bill Rodriguez

Bill Rodriguez

Draper Richards Kaplan Foundation, Managing Director
Michael Feigelson

Michael Feigelson

Bernard van Leer Foundation, Executive Director
Joseph Wu

Joseph Wu

School of Public Health, The University of Hong Kong, Professor
Gabriella Y. Carolini

Gabriella Y. Carolini

MIT, Associate Professor of Urban Planning and International Development
Vanessa Kerry

Vanessa Kerry

World Health Organization, Director-General Special Envoy for Climate Change and Health
Dolores Cortes

Dolores Cortes

Buenos Aires Innovation Park, Director of Institutional Relations