The first MoU signed between AIMED and TiMed, promoted by SreeChitraTirunal Institute for Medical Sciences & Technology
Association of Indian Medical Device Industry (AIMED) announced the launch of ‘UdaiMed’, a new sunrise forum for collaborative interface between user, developer, academia, industry and medical device development in India.
Reportedly, the objective of this collaboration for academic-industry in India is to make on-campus research more aligned to medical device industry’s needs and catalyse ‘Make-in-India’ programme.
To take forward this objective, AIMED and UdaiMed also signed its first MoU with Technology Business Incubator (TiMed), a not-for-profit registered society promoted by SreeChitraTirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology (SCTIMST), Thiruvananthapuram, for encouraging innovation and entrepreneurship in medical technologies through technology business incubation support to innovators, start-ups and industry.
SreeChitraTirunal Institute was created by an Act of Indian Parliament in 1980 and SCTIMST-TiMed is financially supported by the Department of Science & Technology (DST), Government of India and the Kerala State Industrial Development Corporation (KSIDC). Under the terms of new partnership, Shree Chitra will launch TiMeD a ‘Technology Business Incubator’ with the broad objective of supporting and facilitating innovation, entrepreneurship, start-ups, new product development specifically aimed at medical devices development and biomaterials domain.
TiMed will offer office and laboratory space with several common facilities like internet access, library, canteen, video-conferencing facilities for taking forward this collaboration.
According to Rajiv Nath, Forum Coordinator for AIMED and a signatory to the MoU between the two bodies, “The partnership between AIMED led UdaiMed and TiMed is a milestone for industry-academia partnership in the country which will foster world class practical research in India, catalysing Make-in-India mission, help reduce humungous import dependency in medical devices and bring down overall healthcare cost”.
“I am absolutely positive that the new collaboration will construct a better synergy between industry needs and academic research while taking care of fund shortages for research,” added Nath.
Explaining the need for such an initiative, Nath pointed towards the ground realities of campus R&D in India stating, “R&D institutions and engineering colleges do product development in isolation while industry has little or no idea of work being done there, and often such research have no relevance for industry. Collaboration between institutions and industry is completely absent even as most development is for peer academia acclaim rather than meeting industry’s needs or contributing to country’s competitive prowess.”
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