Malav Sanghavi, studying for his Innovation Design Engineering (IDE) Master's dual degree course at Imperial College London and Royal College of Art, won third prize for his BabyLifeBox in a start-up competition held at St James' Palace in London.
"BabyLifeBox is a low-cost baby incubator that provides basic neonatal care at grassroots-level. India hashighest number of babies dying within the first 24 hours of their birth in the world, more than 300,000 a year," Sanghavi said.
The idea for the innovation was born when his cousin's daughter had to be kept alive in an incubator a few years ago.
"This wascrucialfor her survival and we were lucky to have these facilities as we were from developed city of India," Sanghavi said.
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"This got me thinking what happens to the infants who needintimidatecare after birth in a remote village somewherein India. I started looking into some facts and found, according to WHO, 99 per cent new-born deaths occur in middle and low income countries," he said.
Pitch@Palace aims to support UK entrepreneurs by connecting them with potential supporters and investors and had received nearly 200 entries this year. The winning entry involved a 3D printed knitwear start-up.
Sanghavi built his prototype on a small grant of just 500 pounds from Imperial College London's Hackspace programme but is now looking to roll it out on a mass scale through collaborationswith organisations like WHO, UNICEF, the Red Cross and Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.