World Health Organization (HQ)

Request for proposals for deployment of AI-assisted cervical visualization tools in low- and middle-income countries

Last update: May 14, 2026 Last update: May 14, 2026

Details

Location:USA
USA
Category:Consulting services
Status:Open
Sectors:Health, ICT & Telecommunications
Languages:English
Contracting authority type:NGO
Eligibility:Organisation
Budget:N/A
Date posted: Apr 9, 2026

Attachments 3

Associated Awards

Project cycle timeline

STAGES
EARLY INTELLIGENCE
PROCUREMENT
IMPLEMENTATION
Cancelled
Status
Programming
Formulation
Approval
Forecast
Open
Closed
Shortlisted
Awarded
Evaluation

Quick summary

AI generated
Objectives: Select a strategic co-investment partner to complete late-stage development, clinical validatio...
Eligibility criteria: Eligible applicants are organizations able to develop, validate, obtain regulatory approval for, commercialize, and deploy AI-based imaging decision-support tools for cervical screening in LMICs, with capacity for multi-country scale-up within 24 months of market launch. Applicants must demonstrate: (1) Technical capability to build/maintain an AI image-classif...

Description

The Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI), with support from Unitaid, invites proposals for the development, validation, commercialization, and deployment of AI-assisted cervical visualization tools (AI-ACVT) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).
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tender Background

About the Funding Agency

The World Health Organization (WHO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations, consisting of 194 member states, whose main function lies in solving international health problems of the world's population. Founded in 1948 in Geneva, Switzerland, WHO collaborates with governments, NGOs, foundations, researchers, health professionals and other organizations.

WHO’s main missions are to provide international recommendations in the field of healthcare, set health standards and work with national governments to strengthen national health programs as well as develop and transfer appropriate technologies, information and health standards. WHO contributes to the improvement of national health services, the prevention and control of non-communicable and infectious diseases, the protection of the environment, maternal and child healthcare, the training of medical personnel, the development of biomedical research and the elaboration of sanitary statistics.

WHO also serves vulnerable communities and responds to health emergencies by supporting the provision of essential health services in fragile settings. The WHO team works to improve everyone’s ability to enjoy good health and well-being. The budget is financed by contributions paid by member countries, voluntary contributions from member countries or donations. Contributions are calculated on an escalator: rich countries pay more, and poor countries pay less.

WHO key sectors: Healthcare, Humanitarian Aid & Emergency, Social Welfare, Research, Education & Training, Capacity Building, Human Resources, Women & Children, Gender Equality, Science, Advocacy, Risk Mitigation, etc.

About the Sectors

Health

Covers healthcare services, public health systems, and activities aimed at promoting physical and mental well-being.


Key areas:
  • Healthcare services and facilities
  • Public health and disease prevention
  • Medical equipment, supplies, and services

ICT & Telecommunications

Features information and communication technologies, digital systems, and telecommunications infrastructure and services.


Key areas:
  • ICT systems, software, and digital solutions
  • Telecommunications networks and services
  • Digitalization, data, and communication tools

Locations

USA

The United States maintains extensive infrastructure across transport, energy, water systems, digital networks, and industrial facilities to support the world’s largest economy. Infrastructure financing combines federal and state budgets, municipal funding, private investment, and public-private partnerships. Recent federal initiatives have increased investment in roads, bridges, rail, broadband, clean energy, and semiconductor-related infrastructure. Aging infrastructure, regional disparities, and climate resilience are major long-term planning challenges.

Nr. of tenders: 57202
Nr. of grants: 21758
Nr. of donors: 1148
Nr. of jobs: 464
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