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Tag: healthtech

  • Israel’s famed VC Jon Medved, diagnosed with ALS, backed the tech that will improve his life  | TechCrunch

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    Years ago, when venture capitalist Jon Medved took an interest in backing various health tech startups, he had no idea that one day, he would need them to improve his own quality of life. 

    Israel tight-knit startup community received a blow in October when Medved, one of its most famous VCs, announced he was retiring immediately. He was forced to step down from the firm he founded, OurCrowd, after he was diagnosed with the debilitating disease of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS,) also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. 

    “This has come rather sudden,” he told TechCrunch in an audibly hoarse voice — a symptom of ALS — on what could be his last interview. 

    “I had been feeling a little weird before and they didn’t know what was ailing me,” he explained. “I was in the hospital for several weeks recovering, and that’s when they tested me and said, ‘You’ve got ALS,’ which is a horrible disease, the worst you can imagine.”  

    ALS is a condition that degrades the brain’s motor neurons, leading to loss of muscle control, eventually impairing walking, talking, eating, and breathing. He didn’t have the classic symptoms, as his voice was attacked first, not his extremities, he said. But he knows that the condition will worsen, and there is no cure, only therapies. 

    Medved is considered one of the fathers of Israel’s startup ecosystem — often called “Startup Nation” after the decades-old best-selling book of the same name. He helped usher it in, having moved from California to Israel in his 20s, then founding and selling several tech companies before turning to investing.  

    In 2013, he founded OurCrowd. While Israel has many powerful home-grown VC firms, as well as branches of global firms like Bessemer, OurCrowd essentially invented crowdsourced venture capital, where a limited partnership was open to any accredited investor. 

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    The firm’s roster attracted LPs from Asia, Europe, the Middle East and North America, growing a network of 240,000 accredited investor LPs in 195 countries, the firm says. Many of them are doctors, lawyers, and ordinary people who not only help their investment companies, but would have otherwise been cut out of the wealth generation that VCs experience. 

    OurCrowd has backed names like Anthropic, Beyond Meat and Lemonade. 

    Medved describes OurCrowd as now a “significant player” backing about 500 portfolio companies with about 74 exits, including an exit a couple of weeks ago when its infrastructure planning startup Locusview sold for $525 million to Itron. 

    Despite Israel’s conflict with Gaza, which has impacted its citizens and put the nation in global crosshairs over the Palestinian humanitarian crisis, its startup ecosystem has remained strong.  

    As the “startup nation,” Israel remains a key player for cybersecurity and defense tech as well as AI, microchips, enterprise software, food tech, health tech — the whole tech stack. For example, in November, there was “$800 million invested in the Israeli venture ecosystem in one week,” Medved said. The country now has nearly 100 unicorns and over the year, he estimates that between $15 billion and $16 billion was invested in the country in venture deals. 

    Now the tech of some of these startups will help him navigate life with an incurable condition. 

    For instance, he’s had an avatar made of himself that preserves his voice, face and mannerisms. (The photo/video realistic digital twin is pictured and the full video can be seen here.) OurCrowd AI portfolio company D-ID, maker of agents and avatars, partnered with voice AI startup ElevenLabs and other companies through the ALS-focused Scott-Morgan Foundation to create an avatar system designed for people with ALS.

    He just experienced this tech during a Zoom call with another person who has ALS who was using the avatar to communicate. 

    “So this stuff has become very, very personal to me,” Medved said. “It will preserve my voice when it goes.” 

    But he said there will be a variety of startups tech he will lean on. 

    “We’ve made 60, 70 healthcare investments in good companies that help people. We’ve got a company called OncoHost, which uses AI to help select what kind of immunotherapy will actually work for you …  We have companies doing next-generation sequencing for the genome. We have companies doing chronic condition management,” he catalogs. 

    “I tell you now as a once-healthy person [who took health for granted] I felt human pain and disease, but once you are actually engaged in one of these nasty diseases, it changes your perspective,” Medved shared.  

    All of this means that, even though he’s given up his position running the company and may be retiring from the public eye, “I’m far from over, ok? I want to continue to contribute, both to OurCrowd and the overall ecosystem. So I fully intend to not go off [quietly] into this good night.” 

    And in the end, he says “I’m very proud that in a small way, even though all we are is investors, to be part of this movement.” 

    A video featuring Medved’s “digital twin” demonstrates just how realistic his avatar already is.

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    Julie Bort

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  • Heidi Health raises $65M Series B led by Steve Cohen’s Point72 | TechCrunch

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    Dr. Tom Kelly is a trauma surgeon, and everywhere, he sees doctors drowning in administrative work. He wanted change, so he set out to build it. 

    “We wanted to build an AI care partner that would stand alongside clinicians and take care of the admin so that individual providers, like me, can feel empowered to deliver the care which we dedicated our lives to,” he told TechCrunch. 

    Dr. Kelly teamed up with Waleed Mussa, with whom he had worked at a previous startup, and founded Heidi Health in 2021. The company began launching products in early 2024. 

    In just 18 months, he said, the company has returned more than “18 million hours to frontline healthcare providers from more than 70 million patient visits in 116 countries.” 

    The product, as promised, is an AI medical scribe that takes care of all the admin work that hassles doctors. It can transcribe and dictate notes, generate personalized patient summaries, and even track tasks so doctors no longer have a need for sticky notes. 

    Heidi both built its own AI model and builds on top of other models, such as Gemini. “This model agnostic approach means that we can optimize our accuracy, latency, and cost,” he said. 

    On Monday, the company announced a $65 million Series B led by Steve Cohen’s Point72. It also announced a new tool: an AI agent that calls patients on behalf of the doctor. The former Chief Medical Officer at Microsoft, Dr. Simon Kos, is also coming on board, along with Plaid’s head of revenue, Paul Williamson. 

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    The company has raised $96.6 million to date. Others in the round include Goodwater Capital, Headline, Blackbird VC, LG Technology Ventures, and Alumni Ventures. 

    “They had seen all the scribes before,” Dr. Kelly said of Point72. “They’d never seen product adoption and usage metrics like they’d seen in Heidi. They also loved that we were obsessed about the end user experience, because they saw most of our competitors were just doing top-down sales.” 

    The fresh capital will be used to help with product development. 

    Dr. Kelly hopes that giving doctors more access to AI tools will expand the capabilities of clinicians and remove the “drudgery” of their work. 

    He said most of the conversations in the medical world right now are shaped by what is happening in developed countries, “but imagine a world where any healthcare provider in the world can use Heidi to increase their clinical capacity, where they can practice in a war zone, or a refugee camp, or a region hit by climate change or simply an underserved community,” he continued. “Heidi can help them reach more patients and deliver better health care results.”  

    AI is transforming the health tech. Others in the medical scribe space, in particular, include DeepScribe, Ambiance Healthcare, and Abridge. 

    Heidi said it works with more than 2 million clinicians a week, ranging from hospitals to individual practices. It has a free version of the product with paid features, which Dr. Kelly believes has been a good lure for new customers. 

    He said AI is understandably going to change everything in healthcare. But at its core, humanity is still very essential, especially when it comes to maintaining and building trust. 

    “It’s about doubling the world’s health care capacity. That’s the true promise of AI,” he said. “We want to bring it about.” 

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    Dominic-Madori Davis

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  • Cloud Revolutionizes HealthTech & FinTech | Entrepreneur

    Cloud Revolutionizes HealthTech & FinTech | Entrepreneur

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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    During the first phase of the pandemic, many companies were forced to drastically rethink the way they worked. Rapid digital transformation became necessary to survive financially, support evolving consumer needs, and help keep workers connected.

    Overcoming the model of office and lab work with cloud computing

    Cloud computing systems have allowed enterprises, schools, and government organizations to overcome pandemic-induced challenges and meaningfully accelerate innovation and agility toward the market.

    Related: The Rapid Growth Of Fintech: A Revolution In The Payments Industry

    The cloud-computing industry is expected to grow to nearly $500 billion in 2022 — from $243 billion in 2019. Amazon’s Web Services alone is growing 33% per year. This accounted for 75% of the company’s operating income last year.

    Rather than returning to the way things once were, business leaders must continue disrupting industry stagnation with emerging technology. Here’s how the cloud is revolutionizing health tech and fintech industries.

    Cloud-based services are ripe for disruption

    Business leaders in healthcare and dental services have historically faced issues with “on-premise” storage — in-house systems that can limit scalability and storage.

    Related: What is Cloud Computing? Here’s Everything You Need to Know.

    As diagnostic systems become more sophisticated, on-premise servers and aging infrastructure severely limit the ability of providers to implement new tools and leverage the data they already have.

    The limitations also create patient-side challenges. These challenges include difficulty accessing health records, scheduling online appointments, and connecting different healthcare providers for multi-system health needs.

    While these issues have existed for years, pandemic-induced healthcare overwhelms exacerbated problems, making it even more difficult for many patients to access necessary care.

    Upgrading EHR to better Cloud systems

    Solving these problems means upgrading to better systems that can work more quickly, save costs, and evolve with consumers’ and patients’ needs. In a recent case study, MIT Sloan examined how Intermountain Medical Center in Utah modernized its aging in-house EHR system to address common challenges.

    Intermountain substantially improved patient outcomes by upgrading the technology powering its 22 hospitals and 185 clinics while saving millions in procurement and internal IT costs. The MIT analysis confirms what we know to be true: Streamlining patient management with cloud-based systems can reduce attrition rates, recapture lost revenue, and build stronger, lasting relationships with patients.

    How does updated EHR work for the dental industry?

    In the dental industry alone, the average practice loses 20% of its patients, one of the highest attrition rates in healthcare, reported by tab32. Even a minor 3% reduction in attrition could result in $72,000 of additional production per year. Cloud-based services streamline communications, replace archaic booking systems and help patients remember appointments. When outmoded systems are replaced, it prevents long wait times that are already helping dental providers see tangible improvements in their retention rates.

    Finance and the cloud

    In the financial sector, banks scaling through cloud-based technologies are doing better at tracking fraud activity, expediting loan applications, and responding to flurries of customer activity based on market fluctuations. Cloud-based tools also allow banks to implement new mobile banking features, detect money laundering patterns, and automate analyses of underwriting decisions with AI.

    Related: 7 Reasons Why Your Business Should Run On Cloud Accounting Software

    Unfortunately, many banks lag behind in cloud adoption, relying on internal servers with inherent limitations. Currently, only 12% of North American bank tasks are handled in the cloud. Ninety percent of U.S. banks have digital transformation initiatives in place but haven’t converted to them. While titans like Wells Fargo and Capital One are either currently using cloud technologies or in the middle of migrating over — Bank of America built its own cloud. The updated and improved cloud-based technology has saved Bank of America billions of dollars.

    Highly regulated systems are slow to adapt

    Organizations in highly regulated industries are often slow-moving sectors and are historically hesitant to move data out of on-premise servers and data centers.

    The pandemic revealed just how impactful such a move can be. Migration to cloud-based software allows for better service for constituents. The benefits of cloud reveal a reduction in costs and IT issues and high flexibility to respond to unexpected challenges.

    Updating and retiring legacy systems also provides the foundation needed to support long-term growth and scalability. Cloud-based solutions are set to alter how these previously stagnant industries addressed their long-standing challenges at a fundamental level.

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    ReadWrite.com

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  • Home Health Lab Startup Bisu Collaborates With Polaris Dawn to Develop New Ways to Monitor Astronaut Health

    Home Health Lab Startup Bisu Collaborates With Polaris Dawn to Develop New Ways to Monitor Astronaut Health

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    Bisu’s “lab-on-a-chip” urine and saliva analyzer is intended for both consumer and astronaut use.

    Press Release


    Dec 1, 2022 10:00 EST

    Traveling in space leads to bone loss, muscle loss, and an increased risk of kidney stone formation, often starting within the first 24 hours of spaceflight as calcium levels in bone and tissue decrease and are expelled in urine. A new research experiment, selected for inclusion in the upcoming Polaris Dawn spaceflight mission, aims to show if monitoring the first urine sample in the morning could provide a simple way to track astronaut health in space. If successful, the research will provide a pathway to use compact, new inflight monitoring techniques. The day’s first urine sample typically has the highest urine calcium levels in the day and taking measurements from this sample might offer a workable way to assess in-flight bone loss and kidney stone risk. As both space accessibility and long-duration human spaceflights increase, keeping crews healthy by providing personalized, targeted countermeasures will be essential. This will require small, easy-to-use, low-power devices that can provide actionable information using easily obtainable samples of urine or saliva, such as a first-morning void.

    Bisu is a startup that helps people improve their health and fitness through lab-grade testing at home. Working with former astronaut Jay Buckey, MD, Professor of Medicine and Director of the Space Medicine Innovations Lab at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Bisu will support the post-flight analysis of first-morning void urine samples gathered from the Polaris Dawn crew to assess the effect of spaceflight on markers of bone loss, muscle loss, and kidney stone risk. If successful, this research could pave the way for inflight monitoring with new technologies, such as the microfluidic urine and saliva analyzer Bisu has developed. Because weightlessness affects people differently, this kind of in-flight monitoring could provide targeted countermeasures.

    “People will be spending longer times in space, and they may not be able to do the extensive countermeasure programs currently used on the space station,” says Prof. Jay Buckey. “We need simple ways to monitor people while they are in space so that the countermeasure program can be targeted to each person’s individual needs. This research puts us on the path toward that.”

    “We’re delighted to be working with Polaris Dawn and Prof. Buckey on this pioneering research,” says Daniel Maggs, co-founder & CEO at Bisu. “This research reflects Bisu’s commitment to advancing human health by making valuable health data accessible to all – whether on Earth or in space.”

    About Polaris Dawn

    Polaris Dawn is the first of the Polaris Program’s three human spaceflight missions. SpaceX is targeting no earlier than March 2023 for Falcon 9’s launch of Dragon and the Polaris Dawn crew from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Polaris Dawn endeavors to reach the highest Earth orbit ever flown, attempt the first-ever commercial spacewalk, conduct extensive research to further our understanding of human health on Earth and during future long-duration spaceflights, and test Starlink’s laser-based communications in space. For more information, visit polarisprogram.com/dawn.

    About Bisu

    Bisu is a healthtech startup that provides personalized, preventative advice at home, through nutrition and hormone tests using microfluidic “lab-on-a-chip” technology. In late 2021, Bisu announced a $3.2m seed round and collaboration with ASICS, took home the Good Design Award in the wellness category, and won the US Sports & Fitness Industry Association’s startup challenge.

    Bisu’s flagship product, Bisu Body Coach, is currently in beta and can be applied for at www.bisu.com.

    About the Space Medicine Innovations Laboratory at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth

    The Space Medicine Innovations Laboratory is devoted to solving biomedical problems presented by long-duration space flight. The lab has performed work on bone loss, decompression sickness, motion sickness, and psychological countermeasures for isolation and confinement. The lab also advances work that began with NASA into other areas of research. 

    Please address all press inquiries to press@bisu.com.

    Source: Bisu, Inc.

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  • Myant’s Connected Clothing Brand Skiin Announces Open Beta Launch for Garments Enabling Connected Care

    Myant’s Connected Clothing Brand Skiin Announces Open Beta Launch for Garments Enabling Connected Care

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    Skiin’s connected garments help people care for loved ones, wherever they are and whenever they need peace of mind. By knitting the ability to measure one’s well-being into everyday clothes, Skiin has created a way for people to live independently yet still feel connected to those who are invested in their health. Created by Myant, industry pioneer in textile computing, Skiin is now publicly available for the first time ever.

    Press Release



    updated: Mar 18, 2021

    Myant Inc. (www.myant.ca), industry leaders in textile computing and ISO 13485 certified medical device manufacturer, and Skiin (www.skiin.com), Myant’s connected clothing brand, have announced the open beta launch for their collection of smart garments that enable families to care for their loved ones from afar. The Baseline Collection of biometric sensing clothes provides a caregiver with a more continuous and holistic view of their loved one’s well-being and physical status, allowing families to have richer and more informed conversations about health through the built-in communication features in the Skiin Connected Life app. The Open Beta launch is the first time the general public has been invited to purchase and experience the product, now available at an introductory price of $99 USD / $129 CAD for the starter kit.

    Read the full announcement: https://skiin.com/blogs/education/close-to-what-matters-most-launch-of-phase-2-of-the-skiin-early-access-program-open-beta

    The Baseline Collection by Skiin: Clothes That Connect to Care

    Skiin was created to address the challenge of finding a better way to connect aging parents to their families who want to care for them. Though many wearable devices are able to track biometrics, adoption of these technologies can be a challenge for elderly users. Moreover, these solutions often require elderly users to actively interact with their devices and manually log readings. By knitting the ability to sense into everyday clothing, Skiin continually tracks a loved one’s well-being and physical status without requiring them to constantly interact with technology. This gives caregivers and their loved ones peace of mind wherever they are and whenever they want. 

    The Baseline Collection consists of a line of garments knitted using premium materials such as bamboo as well as unique conductive yarns that make the garment feel like any other piece of everyday clothing. The collection at launch will include men’s and women’s underwear in various styles, while other garments like bras and tank tops will be introduced in the coming months. Planned updates in the coming months to the app will include access to ECG tracking, pending Health Canada and FDA approval (feature not currently available), notifications to caregivers about slip and fall incidents, machine learning to provide more meaningful insights and behavioral changes suggestions, that can help improve one’s health & well-being.

    Special Introductory Open Beta Pricing for Skiin

    The starter kit is specially priced for the Beta Launch at $99 USD / $129 CAD (official price: $299 USD / $369 CAD) and will include four pairs of underwear in the style of choice, one Skiin pod, Skiin Connected Life app, charging accessories and a garment wash bag. Please note that the launch price is for a limited number of kits.

    Visit www.skiin.com to discover a better way to connect to care.

    For media inquiries:

    Hannah Fung
    Director of Marketing @ Myant
    hannah.fung@myant.ca

    For business inquiries:

    Ilaria Varoli
    Executive Vice President @ Myant
    ilaria.varoli@myant.ca

    Source: Myant Inc

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