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Bengaluru C-CAMP, ICARS launch AMR innovation challenge
Bengaluru C-CAMP, ICARS launch AMR innovation challenge

Time of India

time10 hours ago

  • Health
  • Time of India

Bengaluru C-CAMP, ICARS launch AMR innovation challenge

Representative Image BENGALURU: The Centre for Cellular and Molecular Platforms (C-CAMP) in Bengaluru, in partnership with the International Centre for Antimicrobial Resistance Solutions (ICARS), has launched the One Health AMR Challenge 2025. This initiative aims to support technologies addressing antimicrobial resistance (AMR) across human, animal, and environmental health. 'The initiative, anchored under the India AMR Innovation Hub (IAIH) at C-CAMP, will identify up to 12 mid to late-stage innovations with Technology Readiness Levels 6–9. Selected technologies will receive financial support of Rs 40 lakh to Rs 2 crore, along with regulatory, IP, legal, manufacturing, and market-readiness assistance,' C-CAMP said on Monday. Applications opened on July 3 and will close on August 3. Focus areas include the detection of respiratory infections in humans, zoonotic diagnostics, reducing antibiotic use in livestock, removing pharmaceutical residues from effluents, and timely detection of bovine mastitis. You Can Also Check: Bengaluru AQI | Weather in Bengaluru | Bank Holidays in Bengaluru | Public Holidays in Bengaluru C-CAMP CEO Dr Taslimarif Saiyed said the challenge is aligned with India's upcoming National Action Plan 2.0 and aims for the rapid scale-up of near-market solutions. ICARS and C-CAMP also plan to mobilise further funding to expand the initiative's reach.

‘Strong deterrent measures needed from government to tackle anti-microbial resistance'
‘Strong deterrent measures needed from government to tackle anti-microbial resistance'

The Hindu

time4 days ago

  • Health
  • The Hindu

‘Strong deterrent measures needed from government to tackle anti-microbial resistance'

In tackling the anti-microbial resistance (AMR) challenges India faces, the difficulty to enforce the existing guidelines has been posing an issue, said Ajay Sood, Principal Scientific Adviser to the Government of India, while addressing the media at an AMR Innovation Workshop held by The Centre for Cellular and Molecular Platforms (C-CAMP). 'Over-the-counter sale of antibiotics is the biggest culprit. We also have fake doctors who prescribe antibiotics. Many people think doctor consultation is a waste. But a pharmacist cannot replace a doctor. People also feed antibiotics to their animals prophylactically, which then gets passed downstream through food products,' he said urging for stronger deterrent measures from the government. Noting that the power of new technology will prove to be extremely useful in biosciences, Mr. Sood said that quantum computing will be a game changer in drug discovery. Building new solutions Taslimarif Saiyed, Director-CEO, C-CAMP, noted that building new solutions was important to tackle the AMR challenge, along with enforcement. He pointed out that Karnataka is now developing its own State Action Plan AMR. 'One of the efforts that has been happening under the aegis of the Office of the PSA, as well as the Department of IT/BT - Government of Karnataka is to build solutions. 'Today, the diagnostic cost is much higher than the antibiotic cost. It also takes a long time to get results and determine which antibiotic to prescribe. If we have solutions that can do quick detection at a lower cost and decide which antibiotic to give, people will rather go through a scientific way of diagnostics instead of directly going to pharmacist and taking antibiotics. Launch of AMR Challenge The event saw the launch of One Health AMR Challenge 2025 by C-CAMP, with the support of the International Centre for Antimicrobial Resistance Solutions (ICARS), to identify, support, and scale breakthrough technologies tackling AMR across human, animal, and environmental health. Selected innovations will receive financial support ranging from ₹40 lakhs to ₹2 crores based on technology readiness. Comprehensive technical assistance—including regulatory, legal, IP, manufacturing, and market readiness support will also be provided. The workshop held by C-CAMP under the aegis of the India AMR Innovation Hub (IAIH), brought together over 50 key stakeholders from academia, industry, government, and the public health ecosystem. Innovations including Pocket PCR devices, air sterilisation systems, and paper-based lateral flow tests were featured. 'Our recently unveiled Biotech Policy identifies AMR as a key focus area for intervention, reflecting the Government of Karnataka's commitment to addressing this challenge through innovation and collaboration. We need a collective, coordinated effort to tackle AMR, and what I see here today through the India AMR Innovation Hub is a promising start — many stakeholders coming together in one room, collaborating to address a shared challenge,' said Ekroop Caur, Secretary, Department of Electronics, Information Technology, Biotechnology, and Science & Technology, Government of Karnataka.

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