Funding Opportunity · CMV-102-26 · Singapore

The Healthspan
Imperative

A fellowship for late-stage postdoctoral scientists at Singapore institutions who have made meaningful discoveries and are ready to envision an entrepreneurial future.

S$100,000 Award Deadline: Aug 15, 2026 12-Month Fellowship 1–2 Awards · 2026 Singapore Institutions
Download Full RFA (PDF) Frequently Asked Questions

This RFA is specific to Singapore. For the California RFA, click here.

A Century of Progress. A Decade Lost.

Life expectancy surged by more than 30 years across the 20th century — driven by antibiotics, vaccines, insulin, statins, and more recently GLP-1 receptor agonists now demonstrating reductions in all-cause mortality. These advances converted once-fatal conditions into manageable ones. Yet the gain in lifespan has not been matched by a commensurate gain in healthspan. Worldwide, the gap between how long we live and how well we live has widened over the past two decades.

9.6 yrs
Global healthspan–lifespan gap
12.4 yrs
Gap in developed nations
~20%
Of adult life now lived with morbidity

Neurological and neurodegenerative disorders affect 55 million people globally (projected to 139 million by 2050); cardiovascular disease claims ~19 million lives annually; metabolic conditions affect over 500 million. Current medical interventions are optimized for extending lifespan and treating individual diseases, not for targeting the biology of aging itself.

The Singaporean Landscape

Singapore exemplifies both the extraordinary success and the urgent challenge of modern medicine. With the world's highest health-adjusted life expectancy (HALE) at 73.9 years and a life expectancy of 84.9 years, Singapore has achieved more than most nations in adding healthy years of life. Yet even here, the gap between healthspan and lifespan persists and is widening: while life expectancy increased by 8.7 years between 1990 and 2017, healthy life expectancy increased by only 7.2 years over the same period.

80%
Of disease burden from aging-related conditions
18.8%
Residents aged 65+ in 2025 (projected 1 in 3 by 2050)
S$59B
Projected national health expenditure by 2030 (from S$21B in 2020)

Nearly 700,000 adults currently live with diabetes (an 11.6% prevalence rate, among the highest in the developed world), and approximately 74,000 older adults live with dementia, over half predicted to be undiagnosed. Without systematic investment in geroscience and translational healthspan research, the trajectory is one of expanded morbidity in the final decades of life.

What the Field Still Lacks

An Evolving Scientific Landscape

The postdoctoral training system has historically focused on preparing scientists for academic careers. An important opportunity remains underexplored: cultivating an entrepreneurial mindset that enables exceptional researchers to see the broader impact of their work. A postdoctoral fellow who understands intellectual property strategy, sources of capital, and how to assess a druggable target can ask not only "Is this scientifically interesting?" but also "Could this solve a real problem, and what would it take to get there?"

Empowering Postdoctoral Fellows

The founder mindset — identifying unmet needs, assessing feasibility, building teams, and navigating the journey from discovery to application — is not antithetical to rigorous academic science but a natural extension of it. The goal of this RFA is to provide first-in-kind bridging support for the most innovative scientific solutions from visionary postdoctoral fellows.

The Singapore Healthspan Ecosystem

Singapore has built one of Asia's most concentrated healthspan research ecosystems. The NUHS Centre for Healthy Longevity at NUS Medicine aims to enhance healthspan by five years through geroscience and longevity medicine, and in 2025 launched a Clinical Trial Centre to advance precision geromedicine integrating multi-omics, digital health monitoring, and AI-driven biomarker research. The PRECISE-SG100K program — spanning NTU, NUS, A*STAR's Genome Institute of Singapore, and the National Heart Centre — is generating whole genome sequencing and deep phenotyping from 100,000 Singaporeans, Asia's most ambitious population genomics resource for aging research. Singapore's unique multiethnic population represents over 80% of genetic variation across Asia, creating an extraordinary substrate for equity-forward geroscience.

Program Overview

Download the RFA

The complete Request for Applications document includes all program details, eligibility requirements, application guidelines, and review criteria in a single PDF suitable for sharing with colleagues and mentors.

Download Full RFA (PDF) Frequently Asked Questions

This RFA is specific to Singapore. For the California RFA, click here.

Diversity, Equity & Inclusion

Critical Mass Ventures is committed to diversity, equity, and inclusion in all aspects of our funding programs globally. We do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, nationality, sex, disability, age, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. We especially encourage applications from individuals from groups underrepresented in science globally and from diverse backgrounds and institutions within Singapore.

Get in Touch

Application Submissions
applications@criticalmassventures.co

Program Inquiries
applications@criticalmassventures.co

General Inquiries
hello@criticalmassventures.co

For fellowship-related questions, please review the FAQs above before reaching out.