Published: 29 Aug 2023
UNICEF Funding Opportunity for Health Tech Startups 2024: Call for Frontier Technology Applications for Strengthening Systems for Health, Nutrition and Mental Health and Psychosocial Support.
The UNICEF Venture Fund is looking to invest in Open Source frontier technology solutions that have the potential to create radical change in children’s health, nutrition, and mental health. We are offering up to US$100K in equity-free funding for early stage, for-profit technology start-ups that can improve the lives of children.
If your company is leveraging cutting-edge technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), data science (DS), drones, blockchain, or extended reality (XR), we want to hear from you! We are specifically seeking companies registered in one of UNICEF’s programme countries that have impressive working prototypes and a commitment to Open Source licensing.
Application Deadline | October 20, 2023 |
Type | Entrepreneurs |
Sponsor | United Nations Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) |
Gender | Men and Women |
We are offering up to US$100K in equity-free funding for early stage, for-profit technology start-ups that can improve the lives of children.
UNICEF’s innovation portfolio approach prioritizes addressing the most challenging problems faced by children and young people through nine thematic portfolios, including maternal, newborn, child & adolescent health, nutrition, mental health, youth, and humanitarian response to reach the most vulnerable populations. These portfolios prioritize solutions that strengthen systems in remote and low or no connectivity areas, improve access to data, skills and services, and empower and actively engage young people.
UNICEF’s Venture Fund is currently looking to invest in companies that are developing software solutions using frontier technologies such as blockchain, drones, data science, artificial intelligence, machine learning, or extended reality to strengthen systems for health, including mental health.
Some of our most pressing questions include, but are not limited to:
Area 1: How might we improve equity and access to services for health, nutrition, mental health and psychosocial support for children and their families?
Area 2: How might we improve data generation and analysis for health, nutrition, mental health and psychosocial support for children and their families?
Area 3: How might we strengthen workforce capacity, especially in fragile contexts and vulnerable populations for improving health, nutrition, mental health and psychosocial support?
For more details, visit UNICEF website