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The National Campaign

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Innovation Next Awards

The Innovation Next Awards is funding new ways to influence behavior change through the use of technology.
stage:
Pre registration
prize:
$400,000
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Teams146
Summary

Overview

The Problem

Have you ever thought you could improve sexual education? Does teen pregnancy prevention matter to you? Interested in developing technology that could change public health as we know it?

If yes, we invite you to enter the Innovation Next Awards.

The Innovation Next Awards, a program of The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, has just announced a call for entries. In the first round, this new awards program will give $80,000 to 10 individually funded teams to develop technology interventions towards teen pregnancy prevention.

The submission period is from December 15, 2015 through January 31, 2016. Entries may be submitted at www.InnovationNext.org. Professionals from all backgrounds with a wide variety of experience and expertise are welcome.

 

The Problem​

Nearly all teen pregnancies are unplanned. That is, teens say they did not want to get pregnant or cause a pregnancy. That alone is reason enough to care about preventing teen pregnancy. But, it is also the case that teen pregnancy is closely linked to a host of other critical social issues—poverty and income, overall child well-being, out-of-wedlock births, responsible fatherhood, health issues, education, child welfare, and other risky behavior. There are also substantial public costs associated with adolescent childbearing. Consequently, teen pregnancy should be viewed not only as a reproductive health issue, but as one that works to improve all of these measures.

Simply put, if more children in this country were born to parents who are ready and able to care for them, we would see a significant reduction in a host of social problems afflicting children in the United States.

Teen pregnancy is a classic "cloud problem" with a number of causes. Lack of knowledge about the full range of contraceptive methods, poor access, and bad relationships all contribute to the problem.

 

The Challenge Breakthrough

We are looking for breakthrough approaches using technology towards teen pregnancy prevention.

What You Can Do To Cause A Breakthrough

  • Click "Follow the Challenge" above to be notified of any status updates to the challenge.
  • Click "Yes Sign Me Up!" above to register for the challenge. You will be notified of any status updates and be able to create an entry to the challenge when it opens.
  • Click on the "Share" button or social media icons above to share this challenge with your friends, your family, or anyone you know who has a passion for discovery.
  • Leave a comment in our Comments Thread to join the conversation, ask questions or connect with other innovators.

 

Additional rules

Who can participate:
Professionals from all backgrounds with a wide variety of experience and expertise are welcome.

Selection of Winner:
Based on the winning criteria, 10 prizes will be awarded in Stage 1 at a level of $80,000/team. In Stage 2, five teams will be awarded prizes that range from $275,000 - $325,000. 

Details 

Candidate teams for Stage One of the Innovation Next Accelerator will be evaluated on the following criteria:

Your team. The proposed team has a passion and commitment to working together to uncover new solutions for tackling teen pregnancy prevention. Your team should have a good mix of skillsets and be able to work together effectively. We also need all team members to agree to participate in all meetings and stages of the project as described herein.

Your perspective and potential for diffusion. We’re looking for teams who are committed to an end-user focused framework—Design Thinking—that is iterative and dynamic. This framework depends on in-depth work with and empathy for the target audience to unlock innovation. As such, we’re expecting innovation teams to come to this project willing to learn and apply what they learn. We also want to spread the potential value and opportunity of using the Design Thinking framework to address teen pregnancy and other similar issues. To that end, we’re looking for teams who can diffuse what they’ve learned to a broader network.

Your challenge and idea. We want to be addressing current disparities and gaps in programming. To that end, we are looking for innovative project ideas that use technology to address a teen pregnancy related challenge. We’re also looking for project ideas focused on high risk population(s) currently underserved by existing evidence-based TPP programs.

Registration and Submissions:
The submission period is from December 15, 2015 through January 31, 2016. Entries may be submitted at www.InnovationNext.org.

This opportunity is made possible by Grant Number TP2AH000023-01-00 from the HHS Office of Adolescent Health. Contents are solely the responsibility of The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Department of Health and Human Services or the Office of Adolescent Health.

Challenge Guidelines are subject to change. Registered competitors will receive notification when changes are made, however, we highly encourage you to visit the Challenge Site often to review updates.


Guidelines

Intellectual Property

The Sponsor will require all content and assets submitted as part of a Finalist’s Submission to be released under open source licenses that permit free distribution, derivative works, and use in commercial and non-commercial settings.

All Innovators are welcome and encouraged to depend on or make use of other components, libraries, content, assets, and code. All such materials must be available under any Open Source Initiative (OSI) or Creative Commons license compatible with the OSI or Creative Commons license under which the Submission will be released. “Compatible” means that each Innovator’s entire Submission must be usable without violating the license terms of those components licensed under the CC BY 4.0 license, Apache License 2.0, or respective OSI license for the components. Source code licensed under the LGPL, BSD, MIT, or Apache licenses currently meets this criterion; other open source licenses may also meet it. If Innovators make modifications to existing open source projects, they are strongly encouraged to submit patches upstream and work to have them accepted. Patches that are not accepted upstream may be submitted as part of the code developed by the Innovator, under the same Apache License 2.0. Content and assets must be licensed under terms that permit commercial usage. The Creative Commons CC BY and CC-BY-SA licenses currently meet this criterion. Innovators cannot submit entries that include or rely on software or content that is either closed-source, proprietary, illegally sourced, or depends on per-seat licensing.

Timeline
Forum
Teams146