One-Day Hands-on Workshop : Attracting Investments for Research and Innovation
25th April 2025 | 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM
The Institution’s Innovation Council (IIC), SSSIHL, is organizing a one-day hands-on workshop on “Attracting Investments for Research and Innovation” on Friday, 25th April 2025, at the Multimedia Learning Centre, Prasanthi Nilayam.
The workshop will be led by Dr. Anand Govindaluri, Founder & CEO of Govin Capital, Singapore, and aims to provide valuable insights into securing venture capital funding and engaging with investors for research-driven innovations.
Schedule Highlights:
Session I (9:00 AM – 10:00 AM): Inaugural Session
Keynote Address: Attracting Venture Capital Funding to Scientific Research and Innovations
Session II (10:00 AM – 01:00 PM): Exclusive Hands-on Session
“One-slide presentations” by faculty researchers
Session III (03:00 PM – 04:00 PM): Concluding Session
Talk on Social and Scientific Innovations and Investors’ Dilemma, followed by an Open House
The workshop is open to all faculty members and research scholars of SSSIHL. Students are also welcome to attend.
Join us Live:
- Morning Session (9-10 a.m.): https://youtube.com/live/p-Um1VMFpvc?feature=share
- Evening Session (3-4 p.m.): https://youtube.com/live/-KPq8k3at9g?feature=share
Cardiovascular Disease : Clogged Arteries could be Debilitating and Fatal
Uday Saxena | PhD (The author has spent the last 25 years researching cardiovascular and metabolic disease therapies. He was associated with the Team at Pfizer which discovered “Lipitor/Atorvastatin” the largest selling statin with peak sales of over seventeen billion dollars annually)
Introduction
Cardiovascular disease, which is manifested as a collection of outcomes such as heart attack, stroke and hypertension, is still the world’s largest killer of humans – twice as many people die of this disease relative to cancer. Several effective drugs in the late 1980s and early 1990 called statins were introduced. The statins did dramatically reduce death due to this disease by lowering blood cholesterol levels. But we still need newer therapies.
What causes cardiovascular disease?
Simply put, it is the clogging of critical arteries which stops blood supply to the organs such as heart, brain or kidneys which results in devastating outcomes. Let us understand how the arteries get clogged. The artery can get blocked due to build-up of fat and cholesterol in the form of a plaque, a physical lump, which then can block blood supply (see picture below of an artery which is clogged). Imagine a waterpipe supplying water in your home, and the pipe gets choked, then water supply is stopped. This is pretty much what happens when the artery clogs. If the artery supplying blood to the heart is blocked, it can cause a heart attack, if it is in the brain, it results in stroke, or if in the kidney artery, then it may cause high blood pressure or hypertension.
Causes
There are several risk factors for the build-up of plaque in your arteries. Let us split them into two buckets
Non-Modifiable
- Age – The clogging increases dramatically in later ages after about 40 years.
- Male gender is more prone than female although after menopause the risk is similar for females.
- Family history, meaning if your grandparents, parents, siblings or uncle or aunts had premature cardiovascular disease before 50 years, the risk is more.
Modifiable
- Smoking
- Sedentary lifestyle
- Obesity
- Diabetes
- High fat and cholesterol diet
Obviously, nothing can be done about non-modifiable risk factors, but the focus of treatment is on modifiable factors.
Treatment
Low cholesterol, low-fat diet, and physical exercise are the first set of interventions for people at risk. The main preventive focus is on lowering your blood cholesterol levels. This is done using statins which are quite powerful at lowering your cholesterol. This alone can cut your risk of cardiovascular disease by 50%. Besides cholesterol, blood triglyceride (fat) levels and blood pressure are also lowered which cuts the risk even more. Similarly, diabetes is also controlled. To treat existing clogged arteries, interventional cardiology is used in the form of balloon angioplasty. In this, a fine tubing attached to an inflatable balloon, is inserted into the artery and then the balloon is inflated which literally blows the block away.
What’s coming?
Statins predispose patients to type 2 diabetes; so, a new set of non-statin drugs are being introduced called PCSK9 inhibitors. These are injectable drugs that lower cholesterol through a new mechanism of action and may not promote diabetes. From interventional cardiology perspective, robotic angioplasty is being used for precision; biodegradable and drug coated inert stents (tiny pieces of thimble-like structures) that keep arteries open and free of plaque build-up are also being used. 3D bioprinted lab grown patches of heart muscles are being tested to replace dead heart tissue and improve blood flow. An individual above 50 should get their blood cholesterol and triglyceride levels tested annually and take a tread mill test (TMT) to stay on top of cardiovascular disease, especially if there is family history.
Read MoreDemocratising Healthcare with Innovative Solutions in India
Dr Anand Govindaluri | Founding Director & CEO Govin Capital, Singapore
The healthcare market globally is a massive and rapidly growing sector of the economy. The global healthcare market size was valued at USD 8.45 trillion in 2020 and is expected to grow at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 5.5 per cent from 2021 to 2028 (Grand View Research, 2020). The healthcare industry in India is projected to reach $372 Bn by 2022, at a compound annual growth rate of 39 per cent. The healthcare industry in India comprises hospitals, medical devices, clinical trials, telemedicine, medical tourism, health insurance, and medical equipment (Investindia, 2022). One of the key challenges in the Indian healthcare market is that the doctor-to-patient ratio in India is relatively low compared to many other countries. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), as of 2021, the doctor-to-patient ratio in India was approximately 1:1456, which is below the global average of 1:1000. This problem can be addressed through public-private partnerships and the adoption of various digital technologies to deliver proper medical services to the patients in a distributed care model.
Rise of Artificial Intelligence and IOT: According to a report by Accenture, the AI healthcare market is projected to reach USD 6.6 billion by 2021 and grow at a CAGR of 40 per cent. AI helps to expedite medical imaging analysis, drug discovery, clinical decision support, patient monitoring, and virtual care. Since the pandemic, it has become abundantly clear how technology has the potential to significantly influence how healthcare facilities are designed, improved, and brought into the new digital era. This foretells us on how people manage their health will change as a result of telemedicine, predictive diagnostics, wearable sensors, and a plethora of new applications. It is heartening to hear that Amazon’s Echo, a voice-activated computer can respond to the name “Alexa” which is trained by the American Heart Association to recite life-saving instructions about cardiopulmonary resuscitation. In addition, Alexa is learning other healthcare abilities, such as being a senior citizen’s companion and responding to queries about pediatric illnesses. It will soon assist doctors in taking notes, requesting scans, and reminding patients to take their medications. It is clearly evident that telemedicine, predictive diagnostics, wearable sensors, and a host of new apps will transform how people manage their health from here after.
Genomic Testing: The implementation of numerous preventative healthcare strategies is in high demand on a global scale. Advances in genomic biology are enabling doctors to provide personalised medicine tailored to a patient’s unique genetic makeup, especially in cancer and other chronic diseases. There is a growing demand for personalised, and precision medicine. Genetic tests would eventually become as cheap as standard blood tests with the reliance on technology and digital tools. This area can actas a viable tool in understanding drug sensitivity, multifactorial or any kind of medical conditions, and pharmacogenomics. Such a discovery will only further provide support to genome sequencing and allow specialists to get more insights into nutrition, genomics, and dietetics.
The global healthcare market size was valued at USD 8.45 trillion in 2020 and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 5.5 per cent from 2021 to 2028
Skilling: While there is a paradigm shift in the curricula all across the globe, with the fast transforming world of technology, Universities, and Colleges are offering many courses like EHealth Management, for students to enhance their skills and competencies to learn, manage, understand, and apply advanced techniques in the healthcare industry. These futuristic programs combine electronic processes and communication strategies, bridging the gap between computers, health, and communications and enabling one to become specialist in the health and management sector.
Mental Health: The healthcare industry is constantly evolving, creating new opportunities and trends. The most fascinating trend is that there is a sizeable cost reduction while providing improved healthcare facilities. Post Covid health scenario has observed a massive rise in mental health issues. Therefore, organisations are gearing up to spread awareness and provide necessary support to the growing demand for mental health services. Healthcare providers offer services for mental health, such as telepsychiatry, counselling, and therapy. There is a dearth shortage and hence demands more mental health professionals, caregivers, and nursing resources to tackle the mental health challenges. The pandemic has disrupted daily life, led to social isolation, increased stress, & anxiety, and caused significant economic hardship, all of which have contributed to mental health issues. Governments, healthcare organisations, and mental health professionals around the world have recognised the need to prioritise mental health in the wake of the pandemic. Many countries have launched mental health campaigns and initiatives to raise awareness of the importance of mental health and reduce the stigma associated with mental illness.
Metaverse in Healthcare: Metaverse has the potential to transform healthcare by enabling virtual healthcare services, improving medical training and education, and providing new opportunities for remote patients or seekers of medical facilities. It is so heartening to see remote monitoring, providing health support, and clinical research becoming a reality. Though in its early stages, metaverse has the potential to revolutionise healthcare in several ways making life easier and affordable to all.
Robotics in Healthcare: Robots are used for surgical procedures, and also assist nurses in moving elderly patients and those with spinal cord diseases, among many other applications. Robotic companions benefit elderly people, lonely people, and even children with chronic ailments in the coming years. As technology advances, robotics in medicine will be used in more practical ways. Robotic systems are being developed using AI and Machine Learning in the performance of routine tasks which are now being done by skilled healthcare practitioners. This will free doctors to treat more patients with less time pressure, promoting a favorable outcome. Another medical model is the ability to pair objects in a computer-generated virtual world which can help to manipulate both objects at the same time – digital twins, the medical gadgets currently on the market, which are basically developed with the expectation that the final product is reliable for testing, and the results are generally trustworthy.
The healthcare industry is constantly evolving, creating new opportunities and trends. The most fascinating trend is that there is a sizeable cost reduction while providing improved healthcare facilities.
Conclusion
While there may be a whole lot of issues to tackle, one can easily know that the future of healthcare and wellness industry is progressing in the right direction where remote care is being delivered efficiently. In parts of North-East India, drones have made a way to deliver lifesaving medicines to the poorest of the poor in a timely manner. This transformation in rural healthcare serves as a powerful example of using technology for making healthcare accessible and affordable to the bottom of the population pyramid.
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