Take a deep breath—creative approaches to clean air in the first 1000 days of life
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- 15 Mar 2017
Overview
Plus 10 Talks
Seed funding to assess and improve air quality in Low and Middle Income Countries (LMIC)
The first 1000 days of life, from conception to 2 years of age, are the most critical in a child’s development. While a baby is forming, growing, and learning, its lifelong developmental trajectory is being shaped by the surrounding environment.
The Importance of Air Quality
According to the World Health Organization, only 1 in 10 people breathe safe air, and air pollution is on the rise. Poor air quality, a silent killer, initiates chronic health problems and causes early deaths. It also has detrimental effects on fetal and postnatal growth and development. Despite decades of efforts to improve air quality, around the world, particularly in Low and Middle Income Countries (LMIC), pregnant women and young children continue to breathe polluted air. For many, inadequate air quality is inescapable, with exposure occurring consistently during everyday indoor and outdoor tasks. In LMICs, the people most likely to breathe poor-quality air are also those who experience hunger, malnutrition, infectious disease, conflict, and natural disasters. In these most affected areas, the problem of air pollution is intractable, even as consequences for young children and other vulnerable groups are acknowledged.
The Air Quality Ideas Lab
The problem of poor air quality during a child’s first 1000 days is complex and multi-faceted, requiring innovative and multi-disciplinary thinking to measure it, understand its consequences, and generate solutions. To address these challenges, UB’s Community for Global Health Equity (CGHE) will host a 3-day IDEAS Lab.
An IDEAS lab is a creative workshop designed to articulate, explore, and address a problem that may be outside of traditional fields of study. Such workshops have been employed by NSF and other funding agencies to bring together diverse scholars motivated to contribute individual expertise to a shared goal. An IDEAS Lab approaches “big thinking” by giving interdisciplinary teams uninterrupted time and space to think creatively and develop innovative solutions to complex problems. The Air Quality IDEAS Lab at UB will be hosted by Know Innovation, Inc., a leadership incubator, and will provide a forum for UB researchers to think outside of the box, develop unexpected solutions with unlikely collaborators, and compete for up to $50,000 of seed funding.
The details
What: IDEAS Lab on clean air in the first 1000 days of life
Who: UB faculty from ANY DISCPLINE interested in measuring air quality, understanding its consequences, or developing solutions for the youngest members of society. No previous experience in LMIC or working directly on measurement, health impacts, or interventions related to air quality is required.
When: 9:00 – 16:00 on January 26-27, 2017
9:00 – 12:00 on January 28, 2017
Where: Hayes Hall, UB South Campus
How: Participants (25-30) will form interdisciplinary teams to address various aspects of air quality. The most successful teams will exploit the diverse backgrounds and expertise of their participants to generate creative, but practical, solutions to complex problems. Teams are aided by expert mentors, who provide feedback and encourage innovation.
For questions, contact Kasia Kordas (kkordas@buffalo.edu).