04/20/2026 | News release | Archived content
Two Schar School of Policy and Government undergraduates took third place and an honorable mention award during the 14th Annual Baylor New Venture Competition in March for pitching a prototype of their medical language translation platform.
The Doctors United DPT/George Mason University sign at the Baylor New Venture CompetitionThe cofounders "really felt like the underdogs," said Anthony Even-Vaca, a 19-year-old sophomore in the Schar School's International Security and Law degree program at George Mason University. "I definitely was the youngest there."
The national competition held at Baylor University's Paul L. Foster Campus for Business and Innovation in Waco, Texas, drew student entrepreneurs from around the country eager to pitch their startup business ideas to panels of judges for cash awards and sage advice. Many of the competitors were doctoral students affiliated with established ventures, Even-Vaca said, heightening the sense of being underdogs in a field of seasoned innovators.
He and graduating government and international politics senior Jayden Banks took the $1,500 honorable mention prize and $500 for placing third in the elevator pitch competition for their self-funded platform, Doctors United DPT.
The idea for the language translation platform stemmed from Banks's experience working for the last two years at the Inova Fairfax Medical Campus as a clinical technician, assisting the medical staff in patient care. He began building the app, he said, about a year-and-a-half ago after witnessing firsthand the difficulties of language barriers in a medical environment and how they can complicate even routine interactions.
"I started testing the prototype on the nurses, my coworkers, and they were super supportive of it," he said. "I interviewed doctors, neurosurgeons, cardiac surgeons, and asked them how language barriers affect them specifically to their specialty."
Banks and Even-Vaca became friends after working together as coaches at a swim school and then sharing a room for a week during a Schar School study-abroad program to Switzerland. Eventually, Banks recruited Even-Vaca to the Doctors United DPT project "and he immediately had ideas for it, like bringing it to refugee camps. And so we started working on it together," Banks said.
It was during a second Schar School study-abroad trip, this one to Israel, where the work they were doing in translating medical terminology became real.
"I got sick, I couldn't get out of bed for a day," Even-Vaca said. "I was wondering, am I going to have to go to a doctor? I don't know Hebrew or Arabic, and I felt a little bit hopeless." (It turned out to be a bad cold. Still, the plane ride home was miserable.)
The app uses AI to render instantaneous translations of some 200 languages, Banks said. It was Even-Vaca's idea, he said, to add a "confidence meter" to override AI's sometimes questionable reliability in translations. "The judges loved it," he said.
The cofounders are actively seeking George Mason alumni and business professors for guidance in building out the award-winning business.
"We're trying to make more connections, networking, and raising capital," Banks said. "We see a big demand for interpreter services in other areas, such as international forums and institutions as well as immigration law. We want to implement it around the world and bridge cultural gaps, help people, make a difference. That's our hope, our vision."