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Saturday, June 20, 2020

Call for Submission: Children’s Prize 2020 - $150,000 Grant

Call for Submission: Children’s Prize 2020 - $150,000 Grant
Do you have an effective intervention that aims to save the lives of children under five? Applications for the 2020 Children’s Prize are now open! Apply before June 28th.

Child mortality is a core indicator for child health and well-being, in which child survival remains an urgent concern. It is unacceptable that about 15,000 children die every day- equivalent to about 10 deaths occurring every minute. Majority of these deaths can be attributed to treatable causes, infectious diseases and neonatal complications being responsible for the vast majority of under-five deaths globally. According to the latest estimates by WHO and the Maternal and Child Epidemiology Estimation Group, of the 5.3 million deaths in children under five that occurred in 2018, about half were caused by infectious diseases and conditions such as pneumonia, diarrhoea, malaria, and birth defects.
The main killers of children under age five in 2018 included preterm birth complications (35%), intrapartum-related complications (24%), sepsis (15%), congenital abnormalities (11%), pneumonia/diarrhoea/tetanus (7%). Almost half of all under-five deaths are attributable to nutrition-related factors, while more than 80 per cent of neonatal deaths occur among newborn infants of low birth weights in the highest-burden settings.

The Challenge
Propose a ready-to-execute project plan that is focused on saving children’s lives under-five.
Projects are evaluated on their:
ability to impact rates within a child mortality indicator (U5MR, IMR, NMR, etc.)
effectiveness
innovation and scalability of the intervention approach within global health
feasibility of the proposed lives-saved estimate
probability of success
ease of verification
inclusion of a process impact assessment
To ensure that more children under the age of five survive and thrive, they must harness knowledge from around the world and across a broad range of disciplines to find the most effective solutions. Project proposals submitted may include but are not limited to, intervention solutions in healthcare services, technology, education, infrastructure and agriculture.

 Benefits
Winner will have the opportunity to enter into a $150,000 grant agreement.

 Eligibilities
The Children’s Prize is available to anyone.
The Children’s Prize contest is open to all individuals who are currently enrolled graduate students in a formal accredited academic institution, worldwide.
Proposals will be accepted from non-profits (charities), for-profits (companies), government programs, academic institutions, and individuals aged 18 years or older.
The prize funds may only be used for charitable purposes, as specified in the contest goals.
Eligible Regions: Open for All


Application Process
The contest process includes three major rounds and two review periods. See details below.

Round 1: Contest participation kicks off with submission of the brief entry form. After all Round 1 submissions have been reviewed, applicants will be notified of their eligibility to continue.
Round 2: Invitation only. Those applicants selected from Round 1 will be asked to provide a more detailed application and required supporting material. Once the second round closes, there will be an additional review period to select finalists and applicants will be notified of the decision.
Round 3: Q&A and judging. Finalists will undergo a Q&A by the prize administrators and judges, and a thorough review of all materials submitted by the expert panel. Once this final review is complete, the judges then vote and the Prize winner announcement is made.
Project proposals are accepted and encouraged from applicants worldwide. The contest is open to any individual, organization, or team meeting the criteria.

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