Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Welfare Foundation awards research grants to 4 projects that aim to tackle Singapore’s social issues

From left to right: Mr Alan J. Wilson, Regional CEO, MSIG Holdings (Asia), Mr Yoshihito Nomura, Executive Director of the MSIWF, Dr Tan Ngiap Chuan, Ms Maria Cecilia Rojas Lopez, Dr Kinjal Doshi, Dr Rufaihah Bte Abdul Jalil, Mr Takeshi Saito, Managing Director, MSIG Singapore and Mr Michael Gourlay, CEO, MSIG Singapore
SINGAPORE — This year’s winners of the Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Welfare Foundation (MSIWF) research grant, awarded last Friday, 20 January, for exceptional insight and potential, comprised of some of Singapore’s leading researchers that aim to make a difference by solving Singapore’s key traffic and healthcare issues for the nation’s ageing population.
The 2016 winners are:
- Ms Maria Cecilia Rojas Lopez, PhD candidate at the School of Civil and Environment Engineering at Nanyang Technological University, for her research that will lead to the development of traffic schemes and policies for the safety of cyclists and pedestrians on footpaths. For this project, Rojas Lopez will study cyclists’ behaviour and their interaction with other path users, which is a potential issue since bicycles have been allowed on footpaths in Singapore since March 2016.
- Dr Tan Ngiap Chuan is a Family Physician, Senior Consultant and Director, Research at SingHealth Polyclinics. His proposed study aims to find out how common is the age-related loss of muscle mass and muscle function, known as “sarcopenia” among elderly patients. Sarcopenia has been shown to be worse amongst the elderly with diabetes. Muscle weakness resulting from the reduced muscle bulk and strength will subject the elderly to increased risks of frailty, falls, fractures, hospitalisations and even premature deaths. The findings from this study will allow doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals to identify the reasons leading to sarcopenia, so that solutions can be developed and assessed if they are effective in reducing the muscle bulk loss, in maintaining or even strengthening their muscle functions.
- Dr Kinjal Doshi, principal clinical psychologist at Singapore General Hospital, aims to create a better tool for use in identifying loss of functional abilities among the elderly.
- Dr Rufaihah Binte Abdul Jalil, assistant professor at the NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, will design a diagnostic tool for atherosclerosis, a main illness known to harden the arteries usually affecting the elderly.
(Refer to Appendix-1 for more details on the winners and their research projects).
MSIWF is a non-profit organisation that is part of the Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Company, Limited, and supports researchers in Japan, Singapore and Thailand for practicable research in two key areas: senior citizen welfare and traffic safety. The MSIWF research grant is unique compared to others, as it supports interdisciplinary research at its early stages, where it is generally tougher for researchers to obtain funding elsewhere.
This year marks the 10th anniversary of MSIWF grant support in Singapore, which was introduced in 2007 for the first time outside of Japan. Since then, MSWIF has supported 38 research projects and has disbursed grants worth more than about S$363,000.
“It is our mission to help secure a sustainable future for the communities at large. With a growing ageing demographic in Singapore, solutions for improving the quality of life are critical for sustainable growth. This grant from Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Welfare Foundation aims to empower talented researchers to do just that,” said Mr Alan J. Wilson, Regional CEO of MSIG Holdings (Asia) Pte Ltd.
The call for the 2016 grants was launched in June last year, and a total of 246 applications were received globally. The winning projects will conduct their research over the next 12 months and their findings will be published in scientific journals as well as shared with the Foundation during next year’s presentation ceremony in 2018.
About Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Welfare Foundation
Founded in 1975 by Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Company in Japan, the Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Welfare Foundation (MSIWF) dedicates itself to practicable research in two key areas: senior citizen welfare and traffic safety. As of 2016, the Foundation has provided more than 1,974 grants with a combined value of JPY 2,295.2 million (SGD 29.90 million). In Singapore, the grant was introduced in 2007, the first by MSWIF outside of Japan. Since then, the Foundation has disbursed SGD 363,296 worth of research grants to 38 projects.
(Refer to Appendix-2 for more details on the foundation and its activities).
For more information, please contact the MSIG Asia communications team.
2016 Research Grant Awardees
Category | Name of researcher | Designation & Institution | Description of research |
Traffic Safety | Ms Rojas Lopez, Maria Cecilia | PhD student, Nanyang Technological University (NTU) | ![]() |
Senior Citizen Welfare | Dr Kinjal Doshi | Principal Clinical Psychologist, Singapore General Hospital | ![]() |
Dr Rufaihah Binte Abdul Jalil | Assistant Professor, Department of Surgery, NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine | ![]() |
|
Dr Tan Ngiap Chuan |
Senior Consultant/ Director, Department of Research, SingHealth Polyclinics |
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About Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Welfare Foundation
- The foundation was established in commemoration of the 80th anniversary of Sumitomo Marine and Fire Insurance Company in September, 1975.
- At the beginning, the foundation mainly supported relief activities related to general insurance, such as giving support to a young boy left behind in a traffic accident and the bereaved family of a firefighter who died while on duty.
- In the 1980s, the foundation devoted itself to disseminating traffic safety campaigns, subsidising educational initiatives related to traffic safety and the facilitation of medical institutions such as emergency medical equipment to hospitals.
- From 1991, the 15th anniversary of the foundation, the support for senior citizen welfare was added to address the growing concerns of an ageing society in Japan.
- Today, the foundation supports a wide range of initiatives including research grants, facility subsidies, publication and thesis awards in both traffic safety and elderly welfare. Senior citizen welfare accounts for 70% of the total support.
- Since 1975, more than 1,974 grants with a total value of more than JPY 2,295.2 million (~SGD 29.9 million) have been disbursed, including 45 grant beneficiaries this year, of which 37 go to researchers in Japan, four in Singapore and four in Thailand. In Singapore, each grant carries a maximum value of S$10,000. Since the projects from Singapore and Thailand were first eligible for the grants in 2007 and 2008 respectively, a total of 38 projects from Singapore and 35 projects from Thailand have benefited from the MSIWF research grant.
2016 Selection committee
Senior Citizen Welfare
Committee Chairman
Yasuyoshi Ouchi
President, Toranomon Hospital
Members
- Hiroko Ooizumi
Former Member of The House of Representatives - Keiko Kodama
Professor, Graduate School, Japan College of Social Work - Kenji Shimazaki
Professor, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies - Toshihiko Iwamoto
Professor, International University of Health and Welfare Shioya Hospital
Traffic Safety
Committee Chairman
Kunimichi Takada
Professor Emeritus, Nihon University
Members
- Haruo Suzuki
Professor Emeritus, Chiba University - Hiroaki Sekino
Professor Emeritus, St. Marianna University School of Medicine - Hiroo Ohta
Professor Emeritus, Tohoku Institute of Technology - Taro Sekine
Professor, Nihon University