管家婆免费开奖大全 to quicken pace of heart research commercialization with new entrepreneurship program
A cardiovascular researcher herself, Soror Sharifpoor knows just how much cutting-edge heart research is being done at the 管家婆免费开奖大全 and its partner hospitals 鈥 which is why she was surprised to discover a dearth of related startup companies.
It鈥檚 a gap she鈥檚 now seeking to bridge.
The research program manager for the Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research鈥檚 translational biology and engineering program spent the past year building a new entrepreneurship program from the ground up.
Called Entrepreneurship for Cardiovascular Health Opportunities, or ECHO, the program introduces cardiovascular researchers to the world of startups and provides them with basic training, networking and funding opportunities.
鈥淐anada is an internationally recognized hub for cardiovascular research with exceptional scientists and clinicians developing ideas with high translational potential,鈥 Sharifpoor says.
鈥淲e want to provide them with the necessary tools to turn their ideas into products that can be used by patients and their doctors.鈥
A partnership with 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 Health Innovation Hub (H2i), one of nine on-campus accelerators, the 12-month ECHO program is open to any student, researcher or entrepreneur in Canada and consists of five modules that teach everything from how to develop a business plan to strategies for navigating regulatory hurdles. Led by veteran entrepreneurs and other experts, the program culminates with a pitch competition for participating ventures that will hand out prizes from a $250,000 pool of startup funding.
close Aug. 24, while the program itself kicks off Oct. 1.
Sharifpoor says improving the translation and commercialization of cardiovascular research is one of the 鈥渕ilestones鈥 originally envisioned for the centre, a partnership between 管家婆免费开奖大全, the University Health Network and the Hospital for Sick Children. The centre was made possible by a $130-million donation from the Rogers family in 2014 鈥 the largest-ever donation to a Canadian health initiative.
Soror Sharifpoor, the research program manager for the Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research鈥檚 translational biology and engineering program, spent a year putting together ECHO (photo by Chris Sorensen)