08 Sep 2016
We are delighted to see the launch of the $20million Antimicrobial Resistance Diagnostic Challenge prize by NIH, BARDA and ASPR, announced today by Dawn O’Connell, Deputy Chief of Staff at The United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). It’s great to see more prizes focused on the urgent and important area of growing resistance to antibiotics. Each year in the US, at least 2 million people become infected with bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics. This prize encourages U.S. solvers to tackle some of the worst infections and will hopefully provide solutions to wider posed by AMR.
The Antimicrobial Resistance Diagnostic Challenge is now open and accepting registrations.
We are also pleased to see that the Antimicrobial Resistance Diagnostic Challenge, like the Longitude Prize, will be focused on a novel, easy to use, rapid, accurate and cost effective point of care test. These kinds of test are very important to help speed up treatment decisions involving antibiotics and will help to reduce unnecessary use.
“I welcome the launch by NIH, BARDA and ASPR of this $20m prize to harness expertise and develop diagnostics to fight the growing resistance to antibiotics in the U.S. Each year in the US, more than 23,000 people die as a result of resistant infections, and this is an issue facing everyone around the world. We hope that innovation through major Prize initiatives to develop rapid, accurate, and cost effective tests will help to ensure we only use antibiotics when we need them and address this international threat to public health.”
– Dame Sally Davies, Chief Medical Officer for England and member of the Longitude Committee.
The two prizes complement each other, and we will help to spread the word about this new Prize so that American teams working on the Longitude Prize are also aware of the Antimicrobial Resistance Diagnostic Challenge.
With these two prizes focused on rapid diagnostics, along with the recently closed EU Horizon 2020 prize, we hope to see great innovations from across the world, and hopefully a number of novel, point of care diagnostics coming to market, to enable us to safeguard our current and future antibiotics, and save lives.
Twitter: @NIH
Congratulations to the winners of the Longitude Prize on AMR, Sysmex Astrego!