UPAP 2Sure
Dartmouth College, 2007 - $18,466

According to the World Health Organization, 25% of the medicines sold in the developing world are inauthentic copies containing little or no active ingredients. When fake drugs are laced with lethal ingredients they can lead to mass fatalities, as was the case in a 1995 outbreak of false meningitis vaccine in Niger that killed 195,00 people. To fight the problem, this E-Team is developing an SMS protocol called UPAP. UPAP is a labeling system for drug manufacturers that allows customers to use their cell phones to text message covert, one-time alphanumeric codes to the drug company's back-end database for verification. The system verifies whether or not the drug is genuine, allowing the customer to get information on what they're buying right at the pharmacy.
A number of competing drug-verification technologies exist, such as RFID and colorimetric/holographic signatures, but none combine UPAP's low cost and high effectiveness. The team plans to focus initially on Ghana, where 40% of the drugs are counterfeit.
Update: a member of the original team have incorporated a new venture as Sproxil, which has several partners, including the World Economic Forum Technology Pioneers Program, Ashoka, Nokia, and a number of telecoms carriers and pharmaceutical regulators in Ghana, Nigeria, and India.
Upcoming Events:
I2V Carnegie Mellon
March 25
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh, PA
I2V Vermont
April 9
University of Vermont
Montpelier, VT
Upper Midwest Entrepreneurship Educators Conference
April 16
University of St. Thomas
Minneapolis, MN
AI2V Rice University
May 17-20
Rice University
Houston, TX
AI2V Oregon
June 12-15
Oregon State University
Corvallis, OR

