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Health Tech Entrepreneur Named 2021 Gates Cambridge Scholar

Veeraj Shah Awarded Four Years of Funding to Study at University of Cambridge

By Abby Robinson

Sundial on UMD campus in the snow

Sundial photo by Stephanie S. Cordle; Shah photo courtesy of the College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences.

Veeraj Shah (below) was named UMD's fourth Gates Cambridge Scholar, and will pursue a Ph.D. in public health and primary care at the University of Cambridge. The digital health entrepreneur plans to combine his interests in preventive health and technology to improve cancer prevention.

A University of Maryland senior who co-founded two digital health tech companies was one of 24 students nationwide awarded a 2021 Gates Cambridge Scholarship to pursue graduate study at the University of Cambridge, the Gates-Cambridge Trust announced yesterday.

Veeraj Shah, who will graduate from UMD with dual degrees in biological sciences with a specialization in neurobiology and physiology and individual studies majoring in health policy and technology, was awarded up to four years of funding through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The university’s fourth Gates Cambridge Scholar, he will pursue a Ph.D. in public health and primary care as a member of St Edmund's College, then plans to earn his M.D. at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. 

Veeraj Shah headshotHis doctoral research will combine his interests in preventive health and technology to improve cancer prevention.

“Specifically, I will develop and evaluate technology that automates provision of information on cancer-preventive lifestyle behaviors,” he said. “My hope is that this research will provide evidence to integrate this technology into existing National Health Service primary care programs and help millions better manage their health.”

A native of Severna Park, Maryland, Shah received a citation from the Integrated Life Sciences program in the Honors College and was a finalist for the Rhodes, Truman and Marshall Scholarships. He has pursued a wide variety of research, policy, service and entrepreneurial opportunities while at UMD. 

He is co-founder and CEO of Chat Health, which uses artificial intelligence text messaging technology to improve access to preventive care services and promote health literacy among students and low-income communities. 

In just a few months, Chat Health debuted. And in March 2020, the company launched a COVID-19 prevention chatbot platform that has already been used by 4,000 individuals. Last month, the company launched a text messaging chatbot platform to improve UMD student adherence to COVID-19 prevention protocols, in partnership with the UMD Student Health Advisory Committee. It is also working to launch a Chat Health mobile app nationally.

Shah also co-founded and serves as co-CEO of Vitalize App, which launched in January 2020 to improve the wellness of health care professionals using tailored mindfulness and resilience practices. The company has already participated in Terp Startup, a summer accelerator program for student entrepreneurs; raised $15,000 in grant funding; and built a team of 10 user-experience designers and backend app developers. The team is currently beta-testing its app with over 100 clinicians and preparing for a public launch in September.

“I am excited by the opportunity to use technology to help an overburdened population and, as a downstream outcome, improve the quality of care for patients,” Shah said.

In addition to running two companies, Shah was a health policy intern with the former U.S. surgeon general, Dr. Jerome Adams. In this role, Shah contributed to the article “Preventing Suicide in the United States” that was published in Public Health Reports in December 2020 and contributed to the 2021 report “Community Health and Economic Prosperity: Engaging Businesses as Stewards and Stakeholders—A Report of the Surgeon General.” 

As a health and human services intern in the Office of the Prince George’s County Executive during his sophomore year, Shah identified gaps in the county’s early childhood services. He worked with the county’s chief health administrator to develop a policy framework addressing these gaps. The framework, which was approved by the county executive in late 2019, led to Prince George’s County becoming the first U.S. county to receive recognition as a UNICEF “Child Friendly City.”

Shah has also worked as a research assistant since March 2019 with Neil Sehgal, assistant professor of health policy and management at UMD, to understand how U.S. graduate student health plan offerings affect student health outcomes and investigate gender-based pay parities among U.S. physicians. He also interned as a business analyst at IBM Watson Health building artificial intelligence technologies for state Medicaid programs and conducted cancer research at the National Cancer Institute and the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. 

He has written five scientific papers, including a first-author paper in the Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics, two papers in the International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics, and papers in the Journal of Neuro-Oncology and the American Journal of Health Promotion. He recently submitted three additional papers for publication on his work with Sehgal.

Shah has also served as a student member on the School of Public Health’s Dean’s Community Advisory Council and the University Senate Research Council. He is also president of the student organization Public Health Beyond Borders, where he is leading initiatives to start partner chapters at other U.S. universities.

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