Sustainability, ESG & Corporate Responsibility

Manulife and UpLink Reveal Winners of Asia Demographic Challenge

Manulife and UpLink Reveal Winners of Asia Demographic Challenge

Challenge is second of three in a multiyear partnership to help shape the future of longevity innovation

Manulife, in collaboration with UpLink, the World Economic Forum’s early-stage innovation initiative, and the Forum’s Centre for Financial and Monetary Systems, is proud to announce the winners of the Innovating for Asia’s Demographic Future Challenge. This initiative, the second in a three-part longevity-focused innovation series, sought bold, scalable solutions to support financial resilience, healthy aging, and lifelong fulfillment across Asia’s rapidly evolving demographic landscape.

From over 85 submissions, ten standout ventures were selected for their transformative potential. Winners will also gain access to exclusive networking opportunities, strategic partnerships, and global visibility through the UpLink ecosystem. Of these, three top innovators will receive a combined CAD $200,000 in prize funding to accelerate their impact.

The winners are:

  • Agewhale (Hong Kong) empowers elderly individuals and caregivers in Hong Kong to age safely at home through its Care Compass app, bridging digital and gerontech divides for improved home safety and care management
  • AqlCare (Abu Dhabi) transforms routine caregiver-patient video calls into structured, continuous cognitive screenings, enabling early detection of dementia and cognitive decline with high compliance and accessibility
  • DoctorTool (Jakarta) is revolutionizing primary care in Indonesia by digitizing clinics with AI-powered SaaS, eHealth apps, and IoMT, improving access, efficiency, and quality for vulnerable communities
  • Happy60plus (Bengaluru) offers holistic, tech-enabled wellness programs for seniors, fostering engagement, independence, and joy through virtual classes and community-building activities
  • Infiheal (Pune) offers hyper-personalized, AI-powered mental and sexual health support, making therapy accessible, affordable, and stigma-free for underserved populations
  • Kinexcs (Singapore) develops AI-driven wearable rehabilitation platforms, enabling home-based, personalized recovery for patients after joint surgeries, reducing healthcare system burden and improving outcomes
  • PINTAR’s (Singapore) Berkala program supports Asia’s returnee migrant workers with lifelong learning, reintegration, and social connection, leveraging digital and offline tools to foster economic and emotional resilience
  • Sav (Dubai) is an AI-powered autonomous finance platform that transforms fragmented financial behavior into intelligent, outcome-driven money actions, helping users optimize savings, investments, and debt management
  • Xandar Kardian (Toronto) enables proactive, preventive healthcare for seniors aging in place using passive radar sensors for continuous, compliance free health monitoring, reducing hospitalizations and improving peace of mind
  • YoungHappy (Bangkok) is a hybrid community platform in Thailand empowering urban seniors to age with dignity, fun, and self-reliance through digital and offline engagement, learning, and work opportunities

“Manulife is proud to lead this initiative in partnership with UpLink, supporting innovative winners who are driving meaningful change across Asia to address the region’s demographic transformation,” said Sarah Chapman, Global Chief Sustainability Officer at Manulife. “These startups are helping people live better for longer, including addressing financial security, physical wellbeing, and personal fulfillment and we’re proud to support their missions.”

By 2050, one in four people in Asia will be over the age of 60i. This profound demographic shift is driven by longer life expectancies and declining fertility rates. As countries in Asia adapt to these changes, people may no longer follow the traditional ‘school, work, retirement’ paradigmii. Instead, they transition more frequently between learning, working, caring, and recreationiii. In addition, recent data from Manulife’s Asia Care Survey showed physical well-being is central to both financial and mental well-being for people across Asia, and that rising health-care costs are a major concern, fueling anxiety about insufficient savings. The challenge aimed to address these issues by focusing on three key areas: Multigenerational Financial Resilience, Equitable Healthy Aging, and Lifelong Fulfillment.

“Early-stage innovation is vital to turning the challenges that come with Asia’s demographic shifts into meaningful opportunities for communities across the region,” said John Dutton, Head of UpLink, World Economic Forum. “Through the Global Longevity Innovation Initiative, we are proud to partner with Manulife and the Forum’s Centre for Financial and Monetary Systems to build an innovation ecosystem that promotes healthier, more financially resilient and fulfilled lives for all generations.”

The third and final challenge in this series will launch in 2026 with a new thematic focus. Manulife’s multiyear partnership with UpLink is part of their global Impact Agenda, which aims to empower sustained health and well-being, drive inclusive economic opportunity, and accelerate a sustainable future. To learn more about Manulife’s Impact Agenda, visit manulife.com/impact.

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