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Submitted by Ana Escalante on September 28, 2007 - 07:47.
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Submitted by Ana Escalante on September 28, 2007 - 10:51.
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Here on NextBillion, we have followed the Disruptive Innovations contest from Ashoka very closely, hoping that a new ‘disruptive innovation’ will provide a good idea or innovation for the BOP. The winners were announced earlier this month and truthfully, I am very disappointed. There were three winners – none of them are international, nor is there one that caters the BOP.

The competition’s objective was to find 'disruptive innovations' – as Professor Clayton Christensen from Harvard Business School refers to innovations that dramatically reshape current trends. This specific competition aimed to find solutions for health and health care marketplace problems. The online competition, "Disruptive Innovations in Health and Health Care-Solutions People Want," was an initiative from Ashoka’s Changemakers. There were 10 finalists - I blogged about them last month - and three winners were chosen by online votes.

A disruptive innovation must be an innovative solution to a problem and it has offer a technology, process or business model that changes the way that products or services are currently available. This can be either by making it more affordable or simpler to use. The potential change caused by such innovations is so dramatic that eventually, the original model is replaced, or 'disrupted.'

The winners of the $5,000 USD grant for "Disruptive Innovations in Health and Health Care-Solutions People Want," competition are:

Project ECHO: Knowledge Networks for the Treatment of Complex Diseases in Remote, Rural, Underserved Communities (University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center). Using telemedicine and the Internet, specialists and primary care providers co-manage patient populations with chronic diseases in rural areas, as well as other underserved communities across New Mexico.

Family Coaching Clinics: A New Model of Preventive Mental Health Care
(UCLA Semel Institute Global Center for Children and Families). Using the same principles as MinuteClinics and RediClinics, Family Coaching Clinics operate in accessible retail environments to make mental health services readily available to families before simple problems become more serious.

Instant Birth Control
(Planned Parenthood of the Columbia/Willamette). Using Web tools and multi-media outreach, this 24/7 online program increases women's access to reliable birth control, eliminating the need for in-person doctor visits for routine contraception and sexual health care.

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Submitted by Ana Escalante on September 28, 2007 - 17:12.
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Technology Benefiting Humanity and the Tech Museum Awards winners were announced earlier this month. These awards recognize and support solutions that benefit humanity and address some of the most critical issues facing our planet and its people.

The Laureates are announced each year and they can be individuals, for-profit, public or non-profit organizations and they must demonstrate that with the use of technology, they can improve the human condition in one of the five areas:

 - Evidence that a serious problem or challenge with broad significance is addressed by this use of technology
- A noteworthy contribution that surpasses previous or current solutions.
- A novel application that represents a breakthrough or a creative adaptation of an existing technology.
- The potential for this use of technology to serve as an inspiration or model for others.

Among the 2007 laureates are P&G's Children's Safe Drinking Water Program, Kiva and PATH all of which we have blogged about on NextBillion. To see the complete list of all Laureates click here.


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