Jane Marie Chenis the co-founder of Embrace, a social enterprise startup that aims to help the 20 million premature and low birth-weight babies born every year, through a low-cost infant warmer... (wikipedia)
My dad, coming from a very traditional family, always wanted me to be a doctor. So he would always ask me, 'What are you going to be when you grow up?' And I'd have to say 'Dr. Chen.'
Since I was about seven, I've loved cooking. I'd wake up at five in the morning and make cinnamon rolls and all these different things.
Many premature babies are never given a chance to make it out of the hospital.
I believe the only way we'll be able to solve infant mortality - and other huge social problems - is by designing solutions for those with the greatest intent to carry it out.
I love classical music and have been playing violin since I was seven. Music helps me to express feelings in a way words often cannot.
This seems counterintuitive, but turns out that as infant mortality is reduced, population sizes also decrease, because parents don't need to anticipate that their babies are going to die.
Around 20 million premature and low-birth weight babies are born every year and are at high risk of death or disability because of hypothermia.
Often, women who lose babies are blamed for the loss of those children and are ostracised.
I'm a big foodie, I do a lot of yoga - I love yoga - I love running... I just enjoy being really active, and traveling.
Technology is only an enabler, which can help achieve the intention of the person who is using it.
I know that a mother, no matter how impoverished or uneducated, will do anything to save her babies.
Music helps me to express feelings in a way words often cannot.
Embrace's infant warmers are a novel solution. The product has been designed specifically for resource-constrained settings.