Venture Development Program prepares Yale students to initiate sustainable health solutions

03/21/24

The Yale Institute for Global Health’s Sustainable Health Initiative (SHI) Venture Development Program is designed to cultivate innovation in global health among students. Launching with an initial cohort of six teams in the fall of 2023, the program aims to create a collaborative space specifically for those engaged in global health challenges. It operates in partnership with the Tsai Center for Innovative Thinking at Yale (Tsai CITY), enhancing interdisciplinary collaboration and offering students a platform to engage in global health entrepreneurship. The program exemplifies a synergistic approach, integrating diverse resources and networks across the Yale campus to foster a rich environment for developing sustainable health solutions.

The SHI Venture Development Program stands out for its commitment to nurturing a diverse range of global health innovations, from AI platforms aiding the elderly to novel devices for personalized medicine and athletic performance enhancement. Each participating team, guided by SHI fellows and leveraging resources from the broader Tsai CITY network, is given the opportunity to develop and refine their concepts, with some advancing to stages where they seek seed funding and recognition beyond Yale. The program not only supports the emergence of innovative ideas but also serves as a learning platform, teaching participants about the intricacies of venture development and enabling them to identify and solve pertinent global health issues effectively.

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Learn more by visiting the YIGH website.

Leadership Fellows gain firsthand global health experience

12/13/21

The Yale Institute for Global Health (YIGH) Leadership in Global Health Fellowship program is designed to offer training and inspiration to young professionals who have a passion for and understanding of the critical importance of health for a just and equitable society. The program provides Yale students and trainees with an in-depth experience of how complex global health challenges – including emerging pandemic infections, the dramatic rise in non-communicable diseases, and other systemic issues impacting the health of the world’s population – are addressed by major global health organizations around the world. 

Though still a young program, the YIGH fellowship has made an impact on its participants, including Ximena Benavides, YLS ’22; Timothy DeVita, YSM resident; and Jessica Tuan, YSM fellow. Their experiences in the program are profiled on the YIGH websiteThis year’s host organizations included the World Bank; GAVI, The Vaccine Alliance; Save the Children; and UNICEF’s Maternal Newborn Adolescent Health Unit. For the summer of 2022, up to ten new fellowship opportunities will be available including new placements with the UN Development Programme.

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To learn more and apply, visit the Leadership in Global Health Fellowship webpage.

Partners join forces to address Caribbean’s climate and health crisis

09/08/21

A consortium of more than 25 organizations has come together to address the public health challenge of climate change in the Caribbean, one of the most vulnerable regions in the world to the adverse health effects of the climate crisis.

The consortium includes the Yale Center on Climate Change and Health at Yale School of Public Health, the Council on Latin American & Iberian Studies at The Whitney and Betty MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies at Yale, and the Yale Institute for Global Health, along with other international, U.S., and Caribbean organizations.

The first step in this collaboration is a virtual conference which will take place in October and focus on the information key stakeholders need for action. 

To learn more, visit the Yale School of Public Health’s website.

Study co-authored by Yale’s Mushfiq Mobarak and Saad Omer: Prioritize developing nations for vaccine distribution

07/26/21

Study co-authored by Yale’s Mushfiq Mobarak and Saad Omer: Prioritize developing nations for vaccine distribution

Yale Receives $15 Million for Health Education Collaboration

07/23/21

Yale has received a $15 million, five-year U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) award to advance research utilization in Liberia’s health sector. This award will fund the continuation of Yale’s strong partnership with the University of Liberia and Vanderbilt University.

The funded project, Applying Research for a Healthy Liberia, will establish a Center for Teaching, Learning, and Innovation at the University of Liberia College of Health Sciences (ULCHS), while also strengthening and expanding administrative and financial management processes so ULCHS can independently compete for and directly manage its own grant funding.

Kristina Talbert-Slagle, assistant professor, Yale School of Medicine, is the principal investigator of the award, which was made to Department of Internal Medicine’s Office of Global Health. The project is the result of many years of collaborative efforts with the Liberian Ministry of Health and University of Liberia, according to Talbert-Slagle. “We have built a mutually trusting partnership focused on fulfilling the vision and goals of our partners in Liberia, and we are excited to continue working together to establish permanent academic programs and robust administrative systems at ULCHS with this award,” explains Talbert-Slagle.

More than half of the funding will go directly to ULCHS, with the U.S. teams providing technical and administrative expertise and support. “With this approach, we can meet our collective goals of establishing permanent educational programs at ULCHS to enable current and future Liberian health workers, educators, and innovators to utilize research in their careers, with long-term positive impact on Liberia’s health sector,” adds Talbert-Slagle.

The project will be implemented by a collaborative team from Yale University, University of Liberia College of Health Sciences, Vanderbilt Institute for Global Health, iLab Liberia, and the Consortia for Improving Medicine with Innovation and Technology (CIMIT) with engagement from the Liberian College of Physicians and Surgeons and Liberia’s Ministry of Health.

ULCHS is the flagship public higher education institution responsible for training Liberia’s clinicians, researchers, health policymakers, and innovators. Led by Dr. Bernice Dahn, who spearheaded work to establish a resilient health system and fit-for-purpose health workforce during her tenures as Deputy Minister and Minister of Health of Liberia, ULCHS is poised to become a globally recognized leader in research utilization, meaningfully connecting academics with policymaking, innovation, and clinical practice.

“Many donor-funded projects implement programming without building systems to install long-term institutional knowledge or capacity for independent initiatives within the host country institutions,” said Dr. Dahn, the Vice President for Health Sciences at the University of Liberia. “We have designed this project with systems-building and institutional sustainability at its core, and we are looking forward to the results.”

“This project highlights the importance of collaboration among universities and across the world to create capacity to achieve equitable and sustainable health care systems for all populations,” said Nancy J. Brown, MD, Jean and David W. Wallace Dean of Medicine at Yale and a member of the Yale Institute for Global Health Leadership Advisory Committee.

Funding for this award is part of the Higher Education Solutions Network at USAID focused on strengthening local scientific and research capacity at higher education institutions in USAID partner countries. By fostering partnerships between U.S. and partner country higher education institutions, USAID seeks to ensure mutual idea sharing and to build individual and institutional capacity for development-relevant research and innovation around the world.

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Read more at the Yale School of Public Health website.

For more information on recent investment by USAID in research and innovation programs in Liberia and Guatemala, visit the USAID website.

YIGH lecture series features Dr. Tedros, Director-General of the WHO

04/27/21

Please note the time change: event will begin 11am EST

YIGH and the MacMillan Center are pleased to host Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization, as its final YIGH Conversation Series guest of the semester on May 11 at 11 a.m. EST. Dr. Tedros will speak on Ensuring an Equitable Response to COVID-19 and Beyond. During this conversation, Dr. Tedros will discuss the importance of response to the COVID-19 pandemic; the value and role of WHO in the world; and, the importance of re-engaging the United States in the global response.

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Please Register for this event hereIf you are unable to join the webinar, feel free to watch on Facebook Live here.

Learn more about the previous events in this series here.

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