A Total of $75,000 Will Be Distributed to Up to Three Finalists

CHICAGO and NEW YORK August 2, 2021 – Loyola University Chicago’s Parkinson School of Health Sciences and Public Health announces its partnership with Lyfebulb, an innovation accelerator bridging the gap between patient communities and the healthcare industry, to launch the 2021 Innovation Challenge: “Meeting Our Moment – Reimagining Innovation, Improving Health Equity, and Building Resiliency.”

“The COVID-19 pandemic has really highlighted the disparities in the U.S. health care system,” said Karin Hehenberger, MD, PhD, founder and CEO of Lyfebulb. “As a platform that promotes experiential innovation, we are pleased to partner with the Parkinson School and eager to see the range of solutions that create better health care delivery models.”

The Innovation Challenge seeks to source a range of innovations from diverse sectors to address the effects of emerging infectious diseases (such as COVID-19) by improving population and public health, health care delivery, and health equity.

According to research from the COVID Equity Response Collaborative, disproportionate health and economic disparities are prevalent in several suburban Cook County communities hardest hit by COVID-19.

“Now is the time, as the country emerges from the pandemic, to drive innovation and develop solutions to improve responsiveness to health crises and identify strategies to eliminate health inequities,” said Elaine Morrato, DrPH, MPH, CPH, founding dean, Parkinson School. “Our focus at Parkinson is on a holistic view of people and society, preparing students to understand how systems and social determinants of health converge as our students are called to innovate and advocate,” she said.

Proposed solutions may include, but are not limited to, digital technologies, devices, consumer products and solutions, and community programs and services. The 2021 Innovation Challenge is open to U.S.-registered organizations in the early/idea stage of development through growth and individuals associated with an established organizational entity. Applicants from underserved communities are encouraged to apply.

Finalists will be announced in late September and will receive an invitation to pitch their solutions to an expert panel of judges comprised of leaders in public health, venture philanthropy, and health care delivery during a two-day, virtual summit (November 16-17, 2021). A total of $75,000 will be distributed among no more than three finalists to advance the development of their innovation. The Innovation Challenge is funded by the generous endowment from Bob and Betty Parkinson, which created the Parkinson School.

Visit Lyfebulb.com to apply and to view eligibility criteria, terms, and conditions. The deadline is September 10, 2021, at 11:59 p.m. EDT on Lyfebulb.com. There is no entry fee.

About the Lyfebulb and Loyola University Chicago Partnership

The partnership reflects a shared commitment to advancing health equity and improving health outcomes for individuals, populations, and systems. The inaugural 2021 Innovation Challenge seeks to strengthen and engage entrepreneurs from health care, technology, and other sectors as well as the Lyfebulb and Loyola communities. Additionally, the 2021 Innovation Challenge will generate awareness around the effects of emerging infectious diseases and identify promising solutions that reduce health disparities and improve health care delivery for all.

About the Parkinson School of Health Sciences and Public Health

Loyola University Chicago launched the Parkinson School of Health Sciences and Public Health in Fall 2019 to educate the health entrepreneurs of the future and impact health care accessibility and equity nationally. The Parkinson School offers 17 degree programs and three certificate and internship programs through four areas of study: Public Health Sciences, Healthcare Administration, Health Informatics and Data Science, and Applied Health Sciences. In Fall 2021, it will launch a new 4+1 BSPH/MPH dual-degree program. The Parkinson School builds on the foundations of Loyola’s nationally recognized Stritch School of Medicine and its Biomedical Programs, Marcella Niehoff School of Nursing, and Loyola’s partnership with Trinity Health (known in the Chicago area as Loyola Medicine). To learn more about the Parkinson School, follow us on Twitter @LoyolaParkinson or on Instagram @loyolaparkinson.

About Lyfebulb

Lyfebulb is an innovation accelerator that bridges the gap between patient communities and the healthcare industry by working directly with patients and care partners to generate insights and build new solutions to reduce the burden of living with chronic disease. Lyfebulb operates across 11 disease states and counting. For more information, visit Lyfebulb.comTransplantLyfe.com, InstagramLinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, and Karin Hehenberger LinkedIn.

For more information:

Loyola University Chicago Contact:

Taylor Utzig

Communications Specialist

608-931-3414

tutzig@luc.edu

Lyfebulb Contact:

Karin Hehenberger, MD, PhD

CEO & Founder

917-575-0210

karin@lyfebulb.com

CHALLENGE TIMELINE

August 2, 2021
Applications Open
September 17, 2021
Submission Deadline
September 30, 2021
Finalist Announcement
November 16-17, 2021
Innovation Challenge
November 17, 2021
Winner Announcement

ABOUT THE VIRTUAL SUMMIT AND $75,000 PRIZE MONEY

The 2021 Lyfebulb and Loyola University Chicago Innovation Challenge: Meeting Our Moment – Reimagining Innovation, Improving Health Equity, and Building Resiliency will source innovative solutions, technologies, methodologies, and services that address the effects of emerging infectious diseases (such as the COVID-19 pandemic) by improving population and public health, health care delivery, and/or health equity.

The Innovation Challenge is open to applicants from different industries and disciplines. Innovators from underserved communities are encouraged to apply. Solutions may include, but are not limited to, digital technologies, devices, consumer products and solutions, and community programs and services.

The Innovation Challenge will be held during a virtual summit on November 16-17, 2021. Applications are open; the deadline to submit entries is September 10, 2021. Selected finalists will receive an invitation to pitch their innovations to an expert panel of judges consisting of public health experts, community advocates, and healthcare industry leaders. A total of $75,000 will be distributed among no more than three finalists to advance the development of their innovation. The 2021 Innovation Challenge is funded by the generous endowment from Bob and Betty Parkinson, which created Loyola University Chicago’s Parkinson School of Health Sciences and Public Health.

In addition to presenting their social ventures and innovative concepts, finalists will have the opportunity to exchange ideas on how to advance innovation in the areas of population and public health, health care delivery, and health equity, and to engage with Lyfebulb founders, Parkinson School leadership, key opinion leaders, and potential partners and investors.

SHARE

THE 2021 INNOVATION CHALLENGE

Through a call-to-action and an invitation to “meet our moment,” the 2021 Innovation Challenge seeks innovative ideas and solutions to address the effects of emerging infectious diseases through advancements in the areas of population and public health, health care delivery, and health equity.

The problem: Over the past several decades, emerging infectious diseases have increased in frequency annually both in the United States and globally. The COVID-19 pandemic is just one example of their devastating impacts on already overburdened health care systems and on the health and well-being of communities across the country and around the world.

The opportunity: COVID-19 and the shortcomings of the U.S. response highlighted the need for more forward-thinking, interdisciplinary, and creative strategies that build resiliency and improve preparedness to better manage pandemics and public health threats. In particular, the pandemic magnified existing social, economic, and racial inequalities and exposed the profound inequities at all levels of the U.S. health system. This Innovation Challenge will help identify barriers to care access, work to understand the underlying causes of health disparities, and advance health equity for all.

We’re reimagining innovation: In response to these challenges and with our vision that multi-sectoral and interdisciplinary cooperation is essential to address them, the Parkinson School, in partnership with Lyfebulb, seeks to reimagine innovation in the population and public health, health care delivery, and health equity space.

SHARE

Join the 2021 Innovation Challenge

ENTRY CRITERIA

Lyfebulb and the Parkinson School seek a wide range of solutions that will improve population and public health, health care delivery, and/or health equity in response to emerging infectious diseases such as COVID-19. Applying organizations must be registered in the United States.

INNOVATIONS

    • Address both the immediate and long-term effects of emerging infectious diseases such as COVID-19 by improving population health, public health, health care delivery, and/or health equity
    • Digital technologies, devices, consumer products and solutions, and community programs and services; technology and systems solutions addressing health care delivery are encouraged to apply

AUDIENCES

    • Communities, particularly underserved populations
    • Health care delivery systems and providers

APPLICANT CRITERIA

    • U.S. entities
    • For-profit companies (e.g., C Corp, LLC, etc.)
    • 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations
    • Individuals with registered organizations

JUDGING CRITERIA

Submissions will be evaluated by a panel of subject matter experts selected by Lyfebulb and the Parkinson School.

The judging panel will assess the following:

UNMET NEED

    • What is the strategic basis for the identified problem/gap or public health challenge (e.g., research conducted)?
    • How is the public health challenge or effect of emerging infectious disease(s) specifically addressed?

IMPACT

    • Does the innovation have the potential to improve population or public health outcomes, health care delivery, and/or health equity?
    • What level of impact will the innovation make?
    • What metrics will the organization use to measure and demonstrate this impact?

FEASIBILITY & SUSTAINABILITY

    • How is the innovation unique to the market or public health landscape?
    • What is the feasibility of development and implementation into the marketplace or healthcare ecosystem (e.g., funding, regulations, testing requirements, etc.)?

THE CHALLENGE IN NUMBERS

2

AUGUST

Applications open on Monday, August 2, 2021

10

SEPTEMBER

Applications close on Friday, September 10, 2021, at 11:59 PM EDT

2

Days

The virtual 2021 Innovation Challenge will take place November 16-17, 2021

$75

Thousand

A total of $75,000 will be distributed among no more than three finalists