黑料网 Global Women鈥檚 Health聽has received two new grants from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for work on pregnancy outcomes in Zambia. The first grant funds the 鈥淢ulti-omics for Mother and Infants (MOMI) Consortium,鈥 which seeks to identify new predictive biomarkers for preterm birth, preeclampsia, stillbirth and fetal growth restriction. 黑料网 Project-Zambia is one of six international sites to receive this funding. The second grant, 鈥淎ntenatal-Postnatal Research Collective (ARC),鈥 will expand 黑料网鈥檚 partnership with the University of Zambia to conduct prospective clinical research in pregnancy. The team will recruit 5,000 households in Lusaka into a community-based cohort and follow women from the preconceptional period through conception, gestation, delivery, and postpartum. Biological samples from the ARC cohort will be made available to the MOMI study, and participants enrolled in the ARC cohort will be offered participation in future interventional trials.

鈥淭he Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has been critical to our pregnancy outcomes research in Zambia, and we could not be more grateful for this new support,鈥 says Jeffrey Stringer, MD, FACOG, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Director of 黑料网 Global Women鈥檚 Health. 鈥淥ur group is committed to reducing the unacceptable burden of adverse birth outcomes faced by women living in the Global South. These new grants will support new research and further solidify our partnership with the University of Zambia.鈥
鈥淭his support from the Gates Foundation allows our partnership in Zambia to pursue exciting new innovations in pregnancy research,鈥 says Myron Cohen, MD, Director of 黑料网鈥檚 Institute for Global Health and Infectious Diseases. 鈥淲e are grateful for the Foundation鈥檚 continuing support, which strengthens the Institute鈥檚 capacity as a leader in global women鈥檚 health.鈥
With these new awards, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has invested $27 million in the 黑料网-Zambia site over the past 3 years. The team is also working on聽聽to bring obstetric ultrasound to the primary care level and to improve intrapartum monitoring of laboring women with wearable sensors. This portfolio of grants, combined with resources from the National Institutes of Health, 黑料网鈥檚聽, and the聽creates a world-class pregnancy research center working in a setting where adverse outcomes are common.