WARF Selects Nine COVID-19 Projects

by Taylor Kennedy

WARF logo

The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation has selected nine projects to receive development funding through the UW/WARF COVID-19 Accelerator Challenge, the organization announced recently.

“The response was overwhelming,” WARF CEO Erik Iverson said in a statement. “We are grateful, humbled and excited to see how these innovations advance over the coming months to help our world respond and recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The selected projects are led by the following Principal Investigators:

  • Azam Ahmed (neurological surgery) and Terrence Oakes (radiology) for safe and sanitizable technologies to help prevent virus spread in a hospital setting.
  • Kayley Janssen (Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene) for surveillance of the virus in wastewaters.
  • Tim Osswald (mechanical engineering) for mass production of cleanable and reusable respirators.
  • Kalpana Raja and Ron Stewart (Morgridge Institute for Research) for a drug repurposing discovery system.
  • Joshua Medow (biomedical engineering) for a digital assistance system for medical staff.
  • Lennon Rodgers (UW Makerspace) for a compact air-purifying respirator.
  • David O’Connor (pathology and laboratory medicine), Thomas Friedrich (pathobiological sciences) and David Beebe (biomedical engineering) for accelerated COVID-19 testing.
  • Nathan Sherer (oncology) for an assay to identify virus inhibitors.
  • Brian Yandell (statistics) for a method to track and visualize the outbreak in counties with small populations.

As previously reported, the $100,000 fund is designed to speed the development of prototypes and other highly deployable concepts that can be commercialized or implemented in 6-12 months.