Vikram Sheel Kumar (born 1976) is an American engineer, doctor, and entrepreneur.
Vikram Sheel Kumar | |
---|---|
Born | United States |
Education | Engineering |
Alma mater | Indian Institute of Technology, Columbia University, Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences |
Occupation(s) | engineer, doctor, entrepreneur |
Father | Vijay Sheel Kumar[1] |
Early life and education
editVikram Kumar was born in the United States to an Indian-American family. His father was a neurosurgeon. As a child, the family returned to India, where Kumar attended the Modern School in New Delhi. After graduation, he studied engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology.
In 1996, Kumar returned to the United States and received a BS in operations research from Columbia University in 1999. He then studied medicine and business at the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, which was supported by The Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans.
Career
editIn 2002, Kumar co-founded Dimagi, a for-profit software company which develops open-source software technology for doctors in impoverished areas. Kumar currently serves as the company's Chief Medical Officer (CMO). He also co-founded Cogito Corp, a startup which uses a mobile-phone-based voice analysis system to determine the mental health patterns of patients, and Ozorie, which manufactures pain relief, rapid healing, and hair revival products.
In 2004, Technology Review named him one of the world's top 100 innovators under 35 in biotechnology and medicine, and awarded him the "Technology in the Service of Humanity" award. In 2005, he received the Ten Outstanding Young Americans (TOYA) award.
In 2005, Kumar was one of the judges on the MIT Technology Review contest, which found a series of proposed refutations of the strategies for engineered negligible senescence approach to biomedical gerontology had not succeeded.[2]
In 2007, Kumar completed a residency as a clinical pathologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital. He then returned to India to help his ailing father, who owned Doctor Kares Hospital, a super-specialty hospital in New Delhi, manage his business. While in India, Kumar also founded another startup. After his father's death, he returned to Boston to better manage Dimagi.
In 2017, Kumar co-founded Clear Creek Bio to develop a dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) inhibitor, called brequinar, for leukemia. The company is also studying brequinar as an oral antiviral drug for SARS-CoV-2. Kumar currently serves as the CEO of Clear Creek Bio. As of now, he lives in Boston, with his wife and two children.
References
edit- ^ "Dr.Vikram Sheel Kumar: What Keeps Us Going | Forbes India". Forbes India. Retrieved 18 January 2018.
- ^ Pontin, Jason (July 11, 2006). "Is Defeating Aging Only A Dream?". Technology Review.
- Dr. Vikram Sheel Kumar. Dimagi
- Healthy Thinking | Vikram Kumar BS'99 - Columbia University
- Vikram Sheel Kumar - Economic Times.
- NRI doctor is one of the 2005 Ten Young Outstanding Americans (TOYA Awards)
- India no longer a hot destination for jobs: NRIs disillusioned; many flee after impulsive return