The Society for Disease Prevention (SFDP) has officially opened applications for the SFDP Health Innovation Challenge 2026, inviting young people across Nigeria to turn practical public health ideas into real community action.
At its heart, this initiative speaks directly to students and young professionals who see problems around them and want to be part of the solution. With three winning teams set to receive a $300 implementation grant, alongside mentorship, visibility, and structured support, the challenge offers more than funding—it offers a starting point. And before anyone can win, the real question becomes: what kind of impact does SFDP want to see?
Driving Community-Based Public Health Innovation
The SFDP Health Innovation Challenge is intentionally designed as a small-scale implementation program, not just another idea contest. It prioritizes action, learning, and genuine community engagement—making sure participants don’t just think through solutions, but actually test them.
Much like practical guides that help people understand everyday processes. This challenge emphasizes clarity, real-world application, and outcomes that communities can feel. It’s about doing the work, learning from it, and improving health where it matters most.
According to SFDP, the challenge empowers youth-led teams to tackle real public health problems while gaining hands-on experience in project design, implementation, and reporting—experience that deepens understanding of how health systems function beyond textbooks.
For many participants, this practical exposure complements academic journeys and competitive pathways.
Focus Areas for Project Submission
To help teams channel their ideas effectively, SFDP has outlined key focus areas that reflect Nigeria’s most pressing public health needs. Applicants may submit proposals under one or more of the following tracks:
Infectious Disease Prevention
Projects addressing malaria, Lassa fever, tuberculosis, hepatitis, and similar threats—especially through community prevention, early detection, awareness campaigns, and environmental risk reduction.
Health Education and Digital Health
Solutions that improve access to health information or services through education platforms, screening and referral tools, digital follow-up systems, or community-wide information campaigns.
Equity-Focused Public Health Interventions
Ideas aimed at populations disproportionately affected by health inequities, including vaccine hesitancy, WASH initiatives, maternal and child health, youth mental health peer support, antimicrobial resistance awareness, and community surveillance.
While these areas guide submissions, SFDP remains open to ideas outside them—provided they are feasible and show clear public health impact. This flexible, impact-driven approach reflects the mindset promoted by leadership and development initiatives.
Who Can Apply
- The challenge is open to teams of 3 to 5 members, made up of students and young professionals aged 18 to 30.
- Teams are encouraged to be diverse in skill and background, with at least one member having health-related training or experience.
- This Program focuse on equipping young people with practical skills for real-world impact.
- Applicants must be based in Nigeria, across any of the 36 states or the Federal Capital Territory.
- Beyond eligibility, SFDP is clear about the type of projects it seeks to support—ideas that are ethical, community-driven, and capable of delivering measurable public health outcomes within a short implementation period.
All proposed projects must be:
- Ethical and non-commercial
- Low-cost and feasible within two months
- Suitable for small-scale, community-based implementation
With eligibility clarified, timing becomes the next critical factor.
SFDP Health Innovation Challenge Key Dates and Timeline
The challenge follows a clear and structured timeline to keep teams focused and accountable:
December 28, 2025 – Call for one-page proposals opens
January 18, 2026 (23:59 GMT+1) – Proposal submission deadline
January 19 – January 25, 2026 – Screening and shortlisting of top 10 teams
January 26 – February 8, 2026 – Video pitch submission (30–60 seconds)
February 9 – February 15, 2026 – Public voting period
February 16, 2026 – Announcement of top three winning teams
February 17 – February 22, 2026 – Prize disbursement and project launch
For teams that make it through, the rewards go well beyond the announcement day.
Rewards and benefits for Winning Teams
Three outstanding teams will each receive:
- A $300 implementation grant
- Official SFDP recognition and visibility
- Mentorship and structured project documentation support
Even teams that don’t finish in the top three still gain something valuable—hands-on experience, exposure, and the chance to remain engaged with SFDP’s broader public health initiatives. This kind of practical learning mirrors opportunities offered through programs.
How to Apply for SFDP Health Innovation Challenge 2026
Applications are submitted by the Team Lead on behalf of the entire team. Each submission must include:
- A one-page project proposal (PDF or DOCX)
- A combined PDF of all team members’ CVs
Only one submission per team is allowed, and there is no application fee.
Apply Here