in-depth healthcare analysis of mhealth trends & metrics q2, 2014
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In-Depth Healthcare
industry Trends & Metrics Report Covers annual period Q2 2014
Mr Kevin Clayton, BSN 8/19/14 State of TeleHealth & mHealth, 2014
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Annual Report: Table of Contents
To Companies in The MHealth Industries __________________________________________ 1
Healthcare Quarter 2 of 2014, Highlights ________________________________________ 1
Digital health M&A on track to double year-over-year _____________________________ 1
Digital Health Metrics Round-Up By Aditi Pai ______________________________________ 3
Patient and consumer metrics _______________________________________________ 4
M _______________________________________________________________________ 5
arket Sizing Predictions and Metrics ____________________________________________ 5
H _______________________________________________________________________ 6
ealthcare Provider News & Trends from Q2 2014 By Jonah Comstock _______________ 6
S _______________________________________________________________________ 8
martphones and tablets still reign (providers cont’d) _______________________________ 8
M ______________________________________________________________________ 10
obile technologies make strides for heart health, diabetes, and more _________________ 10
P ______________________________________________________________________ 12
harma Trends Digital Health during Q2 2014 By Jonah Comstock _________________ 12
Pharma digital health news announcements in Q2 ______________________________ 13
P ______________________________________________________________________ 15
ayor News and Trends f/Q2 2014 By Jonah Comstock ___________________________ 15
D ______________________________________________________________________ 18
igital Health Regulation & Government Policy News, Q2 2014 By Brian Dolan _______ 18
FDA begins deregulation of digital health software ______________________________ 18
FDA makes clear it won’t regulate platforms like Apple’s HealthKit _________________ 19
FDA offers up a long-awaited draft guidance on pharma social media use ___________ 19
FDASIA report from FDA-ONC-FCC sent to Congress ___________________________ 20
D ______________________________________________________________________ 21
igital Health proponents ask Incoming HHS Secretary to De-Restricts TeleHealth (policy
cont) ____________________________________________________________________ 21
Meanwhile, the Senate asked the industry for help improving healthcare transparency _ 21
Table of Contents
NIH: Relatively few apply for mobile health research grants _______________________ 22
EU looks to better regulate mobile health _____________________________________ 22
A dozen Q2 FDA clearances for apps and digital health devices ___________________ 22
Mobile operators make few digital health announcements in Q2 _______________________ 24
V ______________________________________________________________________ 24
enture capital investments f/Q2 2014 By Aditi Pai _______________________________ 24
Contact Information __________________________________________________________ 34
Company Information ________________________________________________________ 34
Pg. 01 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
To Companies in The MHealth Industries
Healthcare Quarter 2 of 2014, Highlights
The second quarter of the year is oftentimes a slow one as the summer months approach,
but Q2 2014 was surprisingly busy for digital health on all fronts. Investment dollars are up.
FDA clearances averaged two per month and a surprising FDA deregulation proposal
dropped during the quarter, too.
M&A was even stronger than it was in Q1,
which was already a record quarter for such deals.
Consumer health perhaps received the biggest boost during Q2 as Apple, Google,
and Samsung – three of the largest companies in consumer tech — each announced plans
to launch health and fitness tracking platforms in the coming months. While details are still
scarce for these three initiatives, their launches are sure to boost consumer interest health
tracking and management tools — at least to some degree.
Digital health M&A on track to double year-over-year
As noted above the quarter had a record number of acquisitions — MobiHealthNews tracked
nine such deals — one more than we did in the first quarter of the year.
That brings the total for H1 2014 — 17 — even with total disclosed acquisitions from all of
2013. Could this year end up yielding twice as many as 2013?
April 2014 — Nuance acquires Accelerad Nuance Communications acquired cloud-based
medical image sharing company Accelarad for an undisclosed amount at some point in the
past. In April, it announced it was launching Accelerad’s technology, combined with
Nuance’s existing networks, under the new name PowerShare Network.
April 2014 — Opko buys Inspiro Medical Biopharmaceutical company Opko Health has
acquired Israeli smart inhaler company Inspiro Medical for a sum in “the low eight figures”,
according to Opko’s Director of Strategic Investment Les Funtleyder. The company will be
Pg. 02 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
using Inspiro’s Inspiromatic technology to develop an app-connected inhaler that will be
bundled with a forthcoming new drug for asthma, COPD, and cystic fibrosis.
April 2014 — Facebook buys ProtoGeo In what might be the biggest mobile health
acquisition of the year, social networking giant Facebook acquired Finland-based fitness app
maker Protogeo for an undisclosed sum. The deal signals Facebook’s interest in mobile
and fitness, but much of the media coverage has focused on dubious changes to Moves’
privacy policy post-acquisition.
April 2014 — Hearst Health acquires CareInSync Hearst Health Network acquired
Santa Clara, California-based CareInSync for an undisclosed amount. CareInSync will
become part of Zynx Health, an evidence- and experience-based clinical improvement
company within the Hearst Health Network, which is itself a recently formed division of the
Hearst Corporation.
May 2014 — Covidien acquires Zephyr Technology In the first of two acquisitions
broken by MobiHealthNews in May, medical device giant Covidien acquired sports and
medical wearables company Zephyr Technology. Although the terms are still unknown,
Zephyr has raised more than $13 million since its founding in 2003 — back when health-
sensing wearables were a relative rarity. Zephyr’s investors included 3M New Ventures,
Alsop Louie Partners and Motorola Solutions Venture Capital.
May 2014 — Weight Watchers acquires Wello During its quarterly conference call with
analysts, Weight Watchers confirmed rumors that had been circulated for a few months that
it has acquired Silicon Valley-based weight loss startup Wello for an undisclosed sum. As
Weight Watchers CEO Jim Chambers and CTO Dan Crowe explained on the call, the Wello
acquisition is an important component of the company’s strategy to compete in an
increasingly digital weight loss market.
May 2014 — Medtronic buys Corventis In another major deal broken by
MobiHealthNews, medical device giant Medtronic acquired peel-and-stick medical sensor
company Corventis. While neither company has publicly commented on the deal, it is
expected to be officially announced some time in the next few weeks. Initial reports put the
deal at $150 million.
May 2014 — St. Jude to acquire CardioMEMS In 2010, St. Jude invested $60 million
in CardioMEMS for 19 percent of the company. They also had an option to purchase the
remaining 81 percent of the company for $375 million. When CardioMEMS secured FDA
clearance last month, St. Jude Medical said that it now intends to exercise its option to
acquire CardioMEMS, and plans on completing the acquisition in the second quarter of 2014.
Pg. 03 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
June 2014 — Physicians Interactive buys MedHelp The digital health marketing
company, which offers medical reference apps and resources like Skyscape and Omnio to
physicians, acquired one of the oldest, online consumer health brands, MedHelp, for an
undisclosed sum. The acquisition marked one of the first forays into consumer health for
Physicians Interactive, which apart from some consumer-facing health advertising through
its mobile ad network Tomorrow Networks, had been largely focused on providers.
Digital Health Metrics Round-Up
By Aditi Pai
This quarter, Manhattan Research’s Taking the Pulse survey found more than a third of
US physicians recommended that a patient use a health app. The research group released
data that suggested physicians’ awareness and engagement with mobile and digital tools is
on the rise, and that this is motivated in some part by the trend toward outcomes-based
care models.
According to the survey, more than a third of doctors said they had been evaluated or
rewarded based on metrics measuring cost of treatment, patient outcomes or referrals in
the past year. Manhattan also found that 47 percent of physicians who owned smartphones
had used them to show patients videos or images. Forty percent said they had increased
their use of digital tools for patient communication over the past year.
These smartphone engagement percentages could be even higher in other countries.
Another Manhattan Research study found 80 percent of physicians in China now own or
use smartphones for professional purposes.
While physicians have been using smartphones increasingly for professional reasons, they
have also been using them more outside of work.
Sixty percent of physicians in the US sent work-related text messages on their personal
phones and 61 percent received them, according to a study of 97 pediatric
hospitalists published in Telemedicine and e-Health.
Only 11 percent of these hospitalists said their organization offered a secure texting service,
but 58 percent weren’t sure. Only 12 percent of physicians sent and received work-related
text messages more than 10 times per shift, but 53 percent of physicians texted about
work-related matters while not on duty.
Pg. 04 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
Patient and consumer metrics
Patients also appreciate when doctors offer digital communication tools. Ninety-three
percent of adults would prefer to go to a doctor that offers email communication, according
to a survey of 433 Americans aged 21 and over from Catalyst Healthcare Research. Of this
93 percent, 25 percent said they would still prefer a doctor that uses email communication
even if there was a $25 fee per episode.
Patients showed that they are more willing to share their health data online as well.
A survey from research firm Kelton and healthcare communications firm Makovsky Heath
found almost 90 percent of Americans say they would make their personal health data
available to researchers to help them better understand a disease or to improve care and
treatment options. Within this group, 26 percent of consumers would share regardless of
whether data were anonymous, 23 percent would share if they could control which data
were anonymous, and 40 percent would share if promised that all data would remain
anonymous.
Consumer interest in wearable technology is also high. Almost 75 percent of Americans
believe wearable technology will have a positive impact on the health, sports, and fitness
industries, according to a couple of surveys conducted by ON World that included
responses from 2,000 consumers. ON World estimates that by sometime next year, 19
percent of Americans will own a wearable technology product.
Already, 15 percent of consumers use a nutrition-tracking website or mobile app to stay
healthy, according to a Nielsen survey of 471 respondents called the Health and
Wellness survey conducted in February 2014. According to Nielsen, 13 percent of consumers
use a fitness game on a mobile devices or game console to stay in shape. Social interaction
is a big motivator for consumers who want to get healthy — 49 percent of respondents said
their family and friends were the most helpful for staying motivated.
Another Nielsen survey found almost one-third of US smartphone owners, which is about
46 million unique people, used apps from the fitness and health category in January 2014.
The data was collected from Nielsen’s Mobile NetView 3.0 software, which is on-device
software installed onto iOS and Android smartphones with permission from survey
participants.
The number of smartphone users that accessed fitness apps in January 2014 jumped 18
percent year over year. Nielsen said popular apps that connect to wearable devices include
Fitbit’s app, which has 3.3 million users, and Nike+Running, which has 0.8 million users.
Pg. 05 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
Nielsen also included Samsung’s S Health app, which has 3 million users, in this category
although when the survey was conducted in January, before Gear Fit launched, there were
no wearable devices that connected with the S Health app in the US.
A study from Flurry found that the most frequent users of health and fitness apps for
iPhones are mostly mothers between the ages of 25 and 54 who are sports fans and who
generally lead healthy lifestyles.
arket Sizing Predictions and
Metrics
Worldwide revenues from sports, fitness, and activity tracking devices will grow
by 46 percent between 2013 and 2019, according to a report from analyst group IHS
Technology. The firm attributes growth to the increasing number of health-conscious
consumers willing to buy heart rate monitors and other wearable devices. IHS pegs global
OEM revenue at $1.9 billion in 2013, which will rise to $2.8 billion in 2019. In 2014
revenues will grow 22 percent to $2.2 billion. IHS estimates that there were 84 million of
these devices in the market last year, and the total number will top 120 million by 2019.
Another report, this one from ABI Research, found that in the first quarter of 2014
activity tracker shipments reached 2.35 million and outsold smartwatches four to one. ABI
added that smartwatch sales dropped significantly in Q1 2014 compared to Q4 2013, and
only a small part of this drop is a result of the holiday season. The firm predicts 10 million
activity trackers will ship in 2014 and 7 million smartwatches will ship.
While there’s growth right now, NPD predicts there may be a drop in wearable device
shipments. The wearables market, including activity trackers, smart watches, and head-
worn displays, is expected to ship 48 million units in 2014 and 91 million in 2015, but after
that, the market is expected to slow down for one or two years “as consumers rebound from
the initial hype”.
Several research firms have predictions for the future of the digital health market.
A report from IHS Technology found global revenue for home healthcare devices and
services will rise to $12.6 billion in 2018, up from $5.7 billion in 2013 while research firm
Berg Insight found remote patient monitoring revenues reached $5.8 billion (4.3 billion
euros) in 2013 and are expected to grow to $26.4 billion (19.4 billion euros) by 2018. Berg
added that three million patients around the world were using connected home medical
monitoring devices in late 2013, but this number will jump to 19.1 million by 2018.
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Pg. 06 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
According to a recent report from ON World, in the next fives years, an estimated 700
million wearable technology devices will ship worldwide, which will make for a $47.4 billion
market. The research firm predicts that hardware sales will continue to dominate revenues
for the next five years but monitoring services, apps, and subscriptions will have faster
growth rates.
And research from Transparency Market Research found the market for mobile health
monitoring and diagnostics was worth $650 million in 2012. The firm projects that the
market will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 43.3 percent from 2013 to 2019.
That will put the market at $8 billion in 2019.
Finally, when analyzing activity tracker shipments, Canalys found in the first quarter of
2014, Fitbit held the majority of the market share. Fifty percent of the 2.7 million wearable
shipments belonged to Fitbit. The report added that the recall of Fitbit Force devices
because of skin rashes apparently did not slow Fitbit’s sale momentum and only affected the
US and Canada.
ealthcare Provider News & Trends from Q2 2014
By Jonah Comstock
The second quarter of 2014 was flush with healthcare provider news, including some big
partnerships, exciting deployments, and major updates to the apps and devices physicians use
on a day to day basis.
Perhaps the most high-profile partnership was Apple’s surprise announcement from the
WWDC stage that it was already partnering with the Mayo Clinic and Epic to integrate with
its new HealthKit development kit and Health iOS app.
“We’re also working with the Mayo Clinic, innovators in healthcare,” Apple senior vice
president of Software Engineering Craig Federighi said at the event. “And with their
integration with HealthKit, they’re going to be able to — when a patient takes a blood
pressure reading, HealthKit automatically notifies their app. And their app is automatically
able to check whether that reading is in that patients’ personalized healthcare parameters
threshold. And if not, it can contact the hospital proactively, notify a doctor, and that doctor
can reach back to that patient, providing more timely care.”
Since then, it’s been reported that Apple is working with a number of other providers
including the Cleveland Clinic and Mt. Sinai Medical Center, as well as one of Epic’s rival EHR
providers, Allscripts.
H
Pg. 07 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
But while Apple presaged some big moves in healthcare, Google’s wearable computer
Google Glass was actually finding its way into hospitals this quarter, with surprising
frequency. Beth Israel Deaconess CIO and practicing ER physician John Halamka told
MobiHealthNews he thought Glass had the potential to be the next iPad, especially for
certain kinds of specialists.
“The iPad is good, but a little large,” he said. “The iPad mini fits in a lab coat pocket, so
really close. For procedure oriented specialists though, having something you wear is even
better than something in a lab coat pocket, because it’s awkward to say ‘I see you’re having
a heart attack, let me just go look at my mobile device and I’ll get back to you.’ It just
doesn’t work to reach into a pocket or turn away from the patient to go get that data.”
As of mid-April, we reported that at least four startups were already focused on building
HIPAA-compliant Glass apps for doctors. A startup called Wearable Intelligence has
developed multiple apps for Glass that will help providers in an doctor’s office setting —
that’s the company Halamka works with at Beth Israel.
Another company, Pristine, advertises the fact that it offers a stripped-down version of
Glass in order to keep it HIPAA compliant. So far, the company has launched two products,
EyeSight and CheckLists. EyeSight streams near-real time audio and video from Glass to
authorized iOS devices, Android devices, Macs, and PCs so that, among other uses, wound
care nurses can transmit point-of-view video to a physician, emergency responders can
send relevant video and information to hospital staff who are preparing to treat the patient,
and surgeons can send a livestream of a surgery from their point of view to residents,
fellows, and surgeons at other medical centers.
CheckLists helps physicians reduce errors by allowing them to launch any list they want to
refer to, for example a surgical timeout checklist, asystole checklist, and cardiac arrest
checklist. Voice activation launches any checklist.
Augmedix, which offers a Google Glass clinical documentation program for physicians, has
already graduated out of an accelerator, Rock Health, with funding and early data from
doctors who have used the program. Augmedix now has 36 employees, is venture-backed,
and is “hiring across the board”, according to Co-founder Ian Shakil. The company did a
study in the fall of 2013 to see if 300 patients at three different pilot sites would be
comfortable with their doctors using Google Glass, they found 99 percent were comfortable
with it.
The fourth startup, Remedy, launched a pilot in May at three Harvard hospitals in which
they provided physicians assistants who were handling night coverage in hospitals with
Google Glass, so that they could send their point-of-view videos to supervising doctors.
Pg. 08 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
From this pilot, Remedy will measure how much the Google Glass system changes the
status quo for how healthcare providers manage the workflow of cases. The company also
wants to measure patient perception and adoption rates on the surgeon side and the
physician’s assistant side.
In June, a fifth startup joined the ranks of entrepreneurs focused on the point-of-care
opportunities for class. Yosko, a hospital software startup that is now a veteran of three
digital health accelerators, geared up to launch pilots with as many as five hospitals this
year. The Cambridge, Massachusetts-based company just graduated from the Sprint-
TechStars accelerator and is developing its software for two platforms — the iPad and
Google Glass.
The iPad app is designed to be a comprehensive, single login app for doctors who work in
hospital settings. As such, it includes EHR access, communication with other members of
the care team, and care coordination to improve patient hand-offs. The Glass app will
eventually have the same features as the iPad app, and be activated with voice commands,
iBeacon technology, or QR codes.
And that wasn’t the end of the Glass news for the quarter. Historically forward-thinking
medical school UC Irvine, which was one of the first to equip its medical students with
iPads, obtained a large number of Glass devices in May. The program will have a total of 30
to 40 Glass units on hand, 10 for third and fourth-year students to use in the operating
room and emergency department and the rest for first and second-year students to use in
the classroom.
martphones and tablets still reign
(providers cont’d)
Of course, while Glass starts to develop a foothold, most mobile-enabled doctors
are still using smartphones and tablets. And some of the biggest players developing
software for those devices made big moves this quarter also.
In the culmination of a long plan, Merck GHI-owned digital health marketing firm Physicians
Interactive launched free iPhone and Android versions of its medical content reader and
physician toolkit iPad app Omnio, and announced it would be sunsetting legacy app
Skyscape Medical Resources once those apps are established. The Skyscape app, which
was bought by Physicians Interactive in 2009, has been around — running on BlackBerrys
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Pg. 09 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
and Palm Pilots, among other things — since 1998. It will be relaunched as Skyscape
Medical Library, a new app focused on medical education.
Physicians Interactive also tipped its hand toward the next direction for the company when
it acquired one of the oldest, online consumer health brands, MedHelp, for an
undisclosed sum. The acquisition marks one of the first forays into consumer health for
Physicians Interactive, which apart from some consumer-facing health advertising through
its mobile ad network Tomorrow Networks, has been largely focused on providers.
In addition, in its Q1 earnings call, WebMD emphasized a focus on physicians and
mobile, and even launched a new app for doctors around the same time of the call. The
new provider app, Medscape MedPulse, is a news reader app designed to give physicians
quick and easy access to the latest medical news. It includes original content from
Medscape including business, legal, and ethical news and commentary, as well as breaking
drug and device news from the FDA along with the latest notable clinical trials. Doctors can
personalize the content delivered to them by specialty.
On the consumer side, WebMD CEO David Schlanger discussed an upcoming feature for a
revamped version of WebMD’s flagship mobile app. The feature, called Healthy Targets, will
be aimed at helping patients, especially those with diabetes, manage their weight. It will
connect the app to the user’s glucometers, connected weight scales, and other wearable
sensors.
Other patient engagement news: Kaiser Permanente told the world that its own mobile
initiative was going strong, with its flagship app, also called Kaiser Permanente, surpassing
1 million downloads. Meanwhile, Partners HealthCare in Boston announced a partnership
with VidScrip to help doctors create bespoke educational videos for their patients to view
on computers or mobile devices.
The end of the quarter saw The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center committing to
deploy at least 2,000 Microsoft Surface Pro 3 tablets throughout its healthcare
system. The system’s clinicians will use the tablets as laptop replacements. The devices will
be equipped with the healthcare facility’s Convergence app, which sits atop its Cerner and
Epic deployments and and also knits together many of its legacy hospital IT systems.
Also this quarter, a few different hospital use cases for iPads emerged. At the University of
Minnesota, hospital IT staff set up a system using iPads, one in the parents’ rooms and
one in the babies’ rooms so that the families can stay connected to newborn children in the
NICU. And two studies — one published in Oncology Nursing Forum and one
in Pediatrics – showed smartphones and iPads could have potential for helping nurses
screen drug, alcohol, and tobacco use and potentially offer counseling.
Pg. 10 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
obile technologies make strides for heart health, diabetes, and more
A number of studies, pilots and newly developed apps this quarter showed the
potential for mobile and digital health to help physicians treat different conditions. Two of
the biggest were in the area of cardiovascular health, while the quarter also saw a lot of
high profile partnerships around diabetes.
In cardiac health news, in a so far unpublished study, the Mayo Clinic found
that incorporating a smartphone app into cardiac rehabilitation can reduce
emergency room visits and hospital readmissions by 40 percent.
In the study, which was funded by the BIRD Foundation and presented at the American
College of Cardiology’s 63rd Annual Scientific Session in Washington, D.C., the Mayo Clinic
designed an online and smartphone-based program for patients recovering from stent
placement for a heart attack. Forty-four patients participated in the study — 25 used the
application and a control group of 19 had regular cardiac rehabilitation without the app.
Patients used the app for three months, and it had two functions: tracking patient vital signs
and providing educational content. For the former, patients tracked weight, blood pressure,
blood sugar, physical activity and dietary levels. The educational content was aimed at
showing patients things they could do to help them avoid a secondary heart event, such as
eating more fish or adding exercise into their daily routine.
Around 60 percent of the control group was either readmitted to the hospital or admitted to
an emergency room within 90 days. In the group that used the app, that number was just
over 20 percent. In addition, the average weight for the app group was about 9 pounds (4.1
kg) lighter than the control group and the average blood pressure was about 8 mmHg
lower.
Additionally, a feasibility study published in the journal Thrombosis and Haemostasis
showed that the AliveCor Heart Monitor can be a cost-effective method to identify high
risk of stroke in adults over 65 years old. Pharmacists screened 1,000 adults at 10 local
pharmacies in Sydney, Australia. Pharmacists used the heart monitor to conduct ECG
readings that lasted 30 seconds to a minute. These recordings were transmitted through a
smartphone to a secure portal where a remote cardiologist interpreted the readings.
Cardiologists were able to diagnose new atrial fibrillation (AF) in 1.5 percent of the
participants. Those diagnosed were at high risk of stroke even though most had no
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Pg. 11 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
symptoms, which suggests they were unlikely to have sought out medical advice
independently.
The Joslin Diabetes Center was busy this quarter, partnering with both connected health
glucometer startup Glooko and Dexcom, a medical device company working on continuous
glucose monitoring. Joslin also created a new non-profit division, called Joslin Institute for
Technology Translation (JITT), so that the healthcare organization can collaborate with
more companies currently developing tools for people with diabetes.
Joslin and Glooko partnered to launch HypoMap, a new patient-facing platform to help
increase patients’ awareness of hypoglycemic events. The platform will include an app for
patients with diabetes that will prompt them, after a hypoglycemic event, to record
symptoms, perceived causes, and self-treatments. The platform will track logged data over
time and present dynamic reports that will be viewable by the patient’s care team. By
tracking symptoms and causes, the system is designed to help patients avoid hypoglycemic
events in the future. It can help patients and providers identify cyclical patterns or red flags
that can indicate an impending event.
Not much information was announced about the Dexcom partnership, but it is part of the
JITT initiative, which is meant to work with physicians to design decision support tools for
managing insulin and glucose tracking, partner with medical device and technology
companies so that Joslin can push for the creation of digital health tools focused on
diabetes, and develop educational programs that help healthcare professionals and patients
adopt the new tools. While Joslin already has a division dedicated to educating physicians
and patients about tools for diabetes, called Joslin Health Solutions, the new initiative will
provide an emphasis on educating patients and physicians specifically about digital health
tools.
A few other diabetes-related initiatives also came to light this quarter. A promising
aritificial pancreas study was published in the New England Journal of
Medicine. The artificial pancreas system — consisting of a Dexcom continuous glucose
monitor, and insulin pump, and an iPhone 4s — was shown to improve glucose regulation in
a simulated outpatient setting in both adults and adolescents with Type 1 diabetes. The
adult patients had their glucose in an acceptable range (between 70 and 180 mg per
deciliter) 79 percent of the time when using the system, compared to 58 percent during the
control period. For the adolescents, the change was smaller but still improved — 76 percent
versus 65 percent.
Additionally, a pilot study at UCLA showed that patients with diabetes were adherent to —
and even enthusiastic about — self-monitoring their vision with a mobile app, but the study
was not able to quantitatively demonstrate a health effect from the intervention. Diabetic
Pg. 12 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
retinopathy, a degradation of vision that can lead to blindness, is one of the most common
complications of diabetes.
A couple of smartphone apps were developed over the quarter that could help with the
detection of cancer. Stanford researchers developed a smartphone peripheral to diagnose
oral cancer, called Oscan. The peripheral device has a mouthpiece and a camera mount.
Users follow the upper and lower bite guides to help them take the desired shots of the
inside of their mouth. According to the researchers, screenings of the oral cavity can identify
a number of diseases, including submucus fibrosis, gingivitis, and oral cancer. And at the
University of Houston, a professor developed an iPhone app, called DermoScreen, that in
early testing was able to detect melanoma 85 percent of the time. The smartphone must be
attached to a $500 dermoscope, which further magnifies the area of the patient’s skin that
will be tested.
Finally, Philips Respironics published a study showing that users of their SleepMapper app
were 22 percent more adherent to continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy
than non-users.
harma Trends Digital Health during Q2 2014
By Jonah Comstock
This quarter saw some limited moves from pharmaceutical companies, but some
long-awaited regulatory clarity for pharma could pave the way for more action in the second
half of 2014, and some studies illustrated the value digital health could have for pharma
companies.
The big regulatory news was the publication of the FDA’s long awaited draft guidance on
social media usage, addressing a lack of clarity industry analysts had previously said was
one factor holding pharma back from interacting online with its customers.
Earlier in the quarter, a study conducted by Boston University, Boston Children’s Hospital,
Harvard Medical School, and Georgetown University researchers concluded that even though
pharma companies might not be tweeting much, drugs were certainly being discussed on
Twitter. They found that, for 23 commonly used drugs, well over three times as many
adverse drug reactions were reported on Twitter in a given time period than were reported
to the FDA. Of course, the study also notes that the tweeted reports, referred to as “Proto
AEs” (adverse events) weren’t necessarily as specific or useful as FDA adverse event
reports.
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Pg. 13 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
The other pharma-related study that came out this quarter was a survey from Accenture
about what consumers wanted from their pharmaceutical companies. In general, consumers
still weren’t that interested in hearing from their pharma company via the
internet. Accenture found that those surveyed still most want to receive medication
information by mail and email — 66 percent wanted information from their pharma
company in printed form and 69 wanted it via email. For pharmacists, 72 percent wanted
printed information and 73 percent wanted email. But demand was still reasonably high for
mobile and web outreach — for pharma company information, 48 percent wanted to be
reached via websites, 44 percent via mobile devices, and 38 percent via social media. For
information from pharmacists, 64 percent wanted website outreach and 38 percent wanted
an app, but only 15 percent were interested in hearing from their pharmacist on social
media.
The survey also asked patients about specific “beyond the pill” services from pharmaceutical
companies — what they wanted to receive and what they were receiving. The biggest
disconnect was rewards programs — 63 percent wanted them but only 10 percent were
receiving. The second most wanted service was product information at 53 percent, although
48 percent of respondents received it. The second biggest disconnect was financial
assistance, which 51 percent wanted and only 10 percent received.
With one exception, the demand for every service exceeded the supply. Only physician
referrals were provided more often than desired — with only 28 percent wanting them and
42 percent receiving them. Other services Accenture asked about were measurement
tracking and alert (35 percent wanted, 20 percent received), access to patient support
forums (29 percent wanted, 16 percent received), and access to clinical trials (28 percent
wanted, 7 percent received).
Pharma digital health news announcements in Q2
In terms of actual moves by pharma companies, the quarter saw Genentech, Opko, Johnson
and Johnson, Novartis, and AstraZeneca making moves in the space, either through
launches or new partnerships.
Genentech, a division of Roche, partnered with PatientsLikeMe in April. The company
signed a five-year deal for access to all of the online community’s de-identified data, the
most wide-reaching data access partnership PatientsLikeMe has entered into yet. The
partnership will allow PatientsLikeMe to move more into oncology, an area of focus for
Genentech, than they have been in the past. Genentech will have access to to
PatientsLikeMe’s network “to enable cross-sectional research and broader discovery of
patient insights,” according to the press release. The company will also be able to search
the data set more effectively and start their own research projects on the platform. They
Pg. 14 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
will also be able to use PatientsLikeMe’s network to both inform patients about clinical trials
and iterate clinical trial design with patient input.
Also in April, biopharmaceutical company Opko Health acquired Israeli smart inhaler
company Inspiro Medical for a sum in “the low eight figures”, according to Opko’s
Director of Strategic Investment Les Funtleyder. The company will be using Inspiro’s
Inspiromatic technology to develop an app-connected inhaler that will be bundled with a
forthcoming new drug for asthma, COPD, and cystic fibrosis. Funtleyder said the company is
not opposed, in the future, to licensing the technology out to other pharmaceutical
companies to use with their drugs as well.
Wellness & Prevention, a division of Johnson & Johnson that works with health plans on
behavior change coaching, launched a mobile app called Track Your Health toward the
end of May. The app is not available to the general public but rather through health plans to
the 30 million covered lives that have access to Wellness & Prevention products. Track Your
Health can incorporate data from a number of third party health trackers and sensors,
allowing users to track and aggregate data, set goals, and visualize their weight, movement
and nutrition progress in the form of charts. Additionally, it will send anonymized data back
to the health plan that users belong to. If users don’t have connected devices, they can
enter some information manually or use the iPhone 5s’s built-in M7 motion co-processor.
Prior to its Q3 partnership with Google, Novartis was active in the second
quarter partnering with health tracking and analytics platform Tictrac to launch an
awareness campaign, called The 7-Day Challenge to Live Like You, for multiple sclerosis
(MS). The campaign prompts participants to track different aspects of their lifestyle
including weight, activity, mood, and workload. This data is used to create visualizations of
their day-to-day life. Participants can sync various platforms and devices with Tictrac’s
platform including Fitbit, Jawbone UP, Withings, Gmail, Facebook, and Runkeeper. Tictrac
also encourages users to visit a Novartis online resource, called Living Like You, which
publishes stories and content from those who live with MS.
After the seven days, the challenge will send users an email with customized insights about
their lives. Some of these insights could be that users burn more calories when they get a
good night’s sleep or that their weight decreases when they are stressed. The program will
not provide medical insights.
Finally, a little over a year after completing a pilot study, pharmaceutical
company AstraZeneca and Exco InTouch launched a mobile-enabled program in the UK
to help patients manage their chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The program,
called Me&MyCOPD, has three components — a portal in which patients can connect with
providers, a server on which information is saved and messages are schedules, and an app
Pg. 15 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
that the patient can use. Patients can use the program to track their condition, add data
from medical devices, manage clinic visits, and view information on how to deal with
different lifestyle issues. AstraZeneca will use this data to better understand what patients
need and to give them personal goals and management tools to better handle their
condition. Because physicians will have real-time access to patients’ data, they will also be
able to monitor the patient’s adherence to treatment regimens and reach out to the patient
if their condition worsens.
ayor News and Trends f/Q2 2014
By Jonah Comstock
This quarter was a relatively quiet one for payors and employers. The quarter saw
small pockets of news for Aetna, Cigna, Amerigroup, and UnitedHealthcare, but nothing too
major. News for employer-serving vendors like ZocDoc and Castlight Health was a little
more significant, and the quarter saw some payers and employee wellness companies,
including Humana, publish efficacy data on their platforms.
Aetna certainly made the decision to shut down CarePass in the second quarter, judging by
the June and July departure dates of executives Martha Wofford and Dan Conroy from the
company. Nonetheless, as of May, Conroy was presenting at HX Refactored in
Brooklyn, reporting that Aetna had embarked on some pilots of CarePass with employers.
Aetna has since shared that those pilots have been cancelled.
The other big Aetna news of the quarter was the departure of iTriage cofounders Peter
Hudson and Wayne Guerra from the health insurance company. A departure after a two-
year earnout is a fairly common length of time for a startup founder to remain with their
company’s buyer, and while Hudson didn’t divulge any details about the acquisition
agreement, he told MobiHealthNews that he and Guerra stayed until they hit certain growth
goals rather than until a particular length of stay. Hudson said he was leaving iTriage in
“very, very good hands”.
Cigna’s big news for the quarter was the first product to come out of the insurer’s
partnership with Samsung, a feature on Samsung’s S Health app called Coach by Cigna,
which launched exclusively on the Galaxy S5, in 36 countries and 26 languages. The
software, which Cigna describes as a “digital health guidance system,” incorporates health
information collected either manually through the smartphone or via sensors in the Galaxy
Gear or Gear Fit. It uses that information to generate a personal health coaching regimen
for users.
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Pg. 16 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
Cigna also release results from its eighth annual comparative study of its consumer-
driven health plan (CDHP) members to its other members enrolled in traditional PPOs
and HMOs. The actual claims data from more than 3.6 million Cigna members were used in
the study, and Cigna concluded — as it has in years past — that members enrolled in CDHPs
were more engaged in their own health and lowered their total medical expenses. Cigna
currently counts about 2.6 million CDHP members.
The insurer’s CHDP members were 50 percent more likely to complete a health risk
assessment and 41 percent of those with a chronic condition were 41 percent more likely to
take advantage of disease management programs if they were enrolled in a CDHP. That’s up
from Cigna’s 2013 version of the survey, which found CDHP members with chronic
conditions were 25 percent more likely to take advantage of those programs.
Both Amerigroup and UnitedHelathcare joined forces with Voxiva this quarter. In April,
Voxiva announced that 100,000 members have enrolled in its Txt4Health program
through Medicare and Medicaid insurance provider Amerigroup. The payor has offered the
program to its members since December 2012. The Txt4health program aims to provide
patients with reminders for health exams, deliver health information, encourage users to
improve their health, and help track weight as well as physical activity. Then in
May, UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of Pennsylvania partnered with Voxiva to
launch two text message-based services for their Medicaid benefit plan members —
Txt4health and Text4kids. Both are available to people enrolled in York, Allegheny and
Philadelphia counties.
Another insurance company, Wellpoint, began marketing an American Well-powered video
visits service called LiveHealth Online to its members and other consumers across the
US. The service is available to anyone living in the 44 states where telehealth is legal and in
Washington DC for $49 per session. Each session lasts about 10 minutes and physicians are
able to prescribe some medications if appropriate, but about a half dozen states do not
allow physicians to prescribe medications to patients as part of an online video visit yet.
The service is also now a covered benefit to some members with Anthem Blue Cross,
Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield and Empire Blue Cross and Blue Shield health plan
members. The insurance company aims to provide the service in all the states where it has
health plans available over the next few years, but the remaining states would have to
make such a service legal before it could roll it out.
In the world of employee wellness, recently IPO’d Castlight Health, which offers employees
a personalized platform, online and on iOS or Android, to compare prices of healthcare
services and keep track of healthcare spending so that employers can reduce that spending
over time, made its first public earnings call. The company announced that it had added
Pg. 17 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
29 new customers this quarter, three times as many as any previous quarter, and revenues
were higher than expected.
ZocDoc, the appointment-booking company that’s occasionally been pegged as one of the
next digital health companies to go public, moved into employee wellness with ZocDoc for
Business. ZocDoc for Business launched with a handful of employer customers, including
Foursquare, Gilt, IAC, Jefferies, NASDAQ OMX, and Quirky.
Employees who use ZocDoc for Business receive the same features that ZocDoc has always
offered, but ZocDoc has also added extra features to their employee accounts, including a
comprehensive US doctor directory, priority access to weekend and evening appointment
times, and appointment-scheduling for wellness events in the employee’s office. Those
might include flu shots, biometric screenings, yoga classes, and nutrition counseling.
Employees will also receive personalized messages and wellness reminders based on their
gender, age, and medical history.
Another company to improve its employee wellness offering was hubbub health, which
made its gamified fitness platform available to any number of friends and family
members of employees in April. Then, in June, an HHS-backed employee wellness
platform called Project Boundary started experimenting with proximity sensors as a
behavior change motivation tool.
Finally, the quarter saw some data from both HumanaVitality and the Vitality Group, the
Discovery Health subsidiary that worked with Humana to create HumanaVitality.
Humana looked at data from individuals who were users of HumanaVitality, and compared
their claims data to their engagement with the program. They found that users who were
unengaged with the program both years spent an average of $53 per month more in
claims costs and had a 56.3 percent higher unexplained absence rate from work than
engaged users.
Users who were unengaged the first year but became engaged the second year, on the
other hand, spent an average of $28 per month more in claims costs and had a 29 percent
higher unexplained absence rate from work than engaged users.
The Vitality Group study found that involvement in an incentive-based program reduced
health risk factors like high BMI, high blood pressure, poor fasting glucose levels, tobacco
use, low physical activity, poor nutrition, and stress.
For users who logged fitness activities and participated in the program, their participation
reduced the size of the high-risk group, based on these factors, from 27 percent of the
Pg. 18 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
population to 21 percent, a 22 percent reduction in the size of the group. For participants in
the program who didn’t log activities, the high risk group went from 38 percent to 33
percent — a 13 percent reduction.
The Vitality Group said the findings of this study were consistent with a published study
based on 300,000 adults, 192,000 of whom were in the program, which found that active
users of fitness programs had hospital costs 16 percent lower than those of inactive people.
igital Health Regulation & Government
Policy News, Q2 2014 By Brian Dolan
The second quarter was a busy one for digital health policy debates and regulations. In
addition to about a dozen FDA clearances for digital health companies, the FDA issued a
handful of important guidance documents and lobbyists pushed other branches of the
federal government to better recognize the potential of telehealth services.
FDA begins deregulation of digital health software
In June the FDA issued a draft guidance document that revealed the agency intends to
further deregulate medical device data systems (MDDS) and some medical image transfer
systems. The FDA wrote that these types of devices are so low risk that they won’t be
regulating them at all.
Examples of health software platforms that have class 1 medical device clearance as an
MDDS includes Validic’s healthcare data integration platform and Qualcomm’s 2net platform
for home health data. Other digital health products like Glooko’s MeterSync cable and
companion logbook app originally started out as a class I MDDS device, but bumped up to a
class II 510(k) clearance to allow it to begin offering more analysis of the collected health
data.
In its new draft guidance document on the deregulation of MDDS, the FDA stated that the
success of digital health “requires that many medical devices be interoperable with other
types of medical devices and with various types of health information technology. The
foundation for such inter-communication is hardware and software that transfer, store,
convert formats, and display medical device data or medical imaging data.”
FDA senior policy advisor Bakul Patel explained the move in a blog post: “We’ve been
working with two other federal agencies that oversee health IT – The Office of the National
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Pg. 19 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) and the Department of Health and Human Services, and
the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on a proposed risk-based regulatory
framework for health IT that promotes innovation, protects patient safety, and avoids
regulatory duplication. In the course of our work on the proposed framework, we sought
extensive public feedback. And we listened.”
FDA makes clear it won’t regulate platforms like Apple’s
HealthKit
Early in June a few unusual stories about FDA regulation of mobile health surfaced. Thanks
to a Freedom of Information Act request, the FDA shared a memo about its meeting
with Apple executives late last year. While the memo had a number of cryptic details
from the meeting, at one point Apple told the FDA that “industry is always going to be
pushing the boundaries”, indicating that it would be positioning its rumored device and its
already announced health tracking platform right at the edge of what the FDA considers a
regulated medical device.
The day after the memo came to light, however, the FDA made a rare move and added a
new description for a type of mobile medical app that it would not regulate as a medical
device. The FDA has actually added a total of four such new descriptions to its list in 2014.
It just so happened that the latest app description to make it on the list is a fairly close
match to what Apple’s Health app is.
Here’s the app description the FDA added on June 11th: “Mobile apps that allows a user to
collect, log, track and trend data such as blood glucose, blood pressure, heart rate, weight
or other data from a device to eventually share with a heath care provider, or upload it to
an online (cloud) database, personal or electronic health record. [Added June 11, 2014].”
The description also tracked with the FDA’s move a few days later to announce the de-
regulation of MDDS, as described in the section above.
FDA offers up a long-awaited draft guidance on pharma social
media use
The FDA, at long last, released draft guidance for how pharmaceutical companies should
behave on limited-character social media platforms like Twitter and when correcting
misinformation on third-party sites.
Pg. 20 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
The FDA carefully controls labeling, advertisement, and promotion for drugs and devices
requiring FDA clearance. It makes sure that companies never list the benefits of a drug
without also disclosing its side effects and that drugs are advertised only for uses for which
they have been approved. The internet has complicated those regulations.
For instance, in cases where pharma companies wish to use Twitter, it has been unclear
whether they can string the required information about a drug over several tweets, or
whether each tweet constitutes a separate communication from the company. Additionally,
when drug companies encounter misinformation posted on the internet and want to correct
it, is that correction bound by all the same requirements as an advertisement or an official
company statement?
The draft guidance, presented in the form of two documents posted to the FDA website,
attempts to address these concerns. Although the guidelines are non-binding guidance
documents, they should go a long way toward clarifying for drug manufacturers exactly how
much care they have to take in online communication. MobiHealthNews rounded up a
number of takeaways from the draft guidance here.
FDASIA report from FDA-ONC-FCC sent to Congress
The FDA, along with the FCC and ONC has finally released the report to
Congress required by the FDA Safety and Innovation Act (FDASIA) of 2012. This FDASIA
report, called “Proposed Strategy and Recommendations for a Risk-Based Framework,”
reiterates previously articulated FDA positions on regulatory discretion and avoiding
regulatory redundancy between the FDA, ONC, and FDA. It’s based on the work done by the
FDASIA work group that began meeting nearly a year ago. According to the FDASIA
legislation, the agencies were required to submit the report 18 months after the law’s
passage. They were about five months late on delivery.
Specifically, the report breaks medical software down into three buckets: health
administration software, health management software (which includes clinical decision
support), and medical device software directly involved in the diagnosis or treatment of
patients. The FDASIA report says that the first area does not fall under the FDA’s
jurisdiction and the second area technically does fall under the FDA’s jurisdiction but the
agency will choose not to regulate those devices, instead leaving oversight of them up to
the ONC and the private sector. The FDA will focus only on the third category. If a device
straddles the two categories — like an EHR with built-in radiological image viewing — the
FDA will regulate the medical device components without needing to evaluate the complete
system. Additionally, the report contains plans to create the Health IT Safety Center, an
additional entity that will help create standards and evaluate efficacy of new technologies.
Pg. 21 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
The framework led to the FDA backing off on regulating certain lower-risk health software,
as described above. It led to even more such de-regulatory announcements in Q3.
igital Health proponents ask Incoming HHS
Secretary to De-Restricts TeleHealth (policy cont)
After effort s to remove restrictions from CMS coverage of telehealth through
legislative channels have stalled, telehealth stakeholders have sent a barrage of open
letters to incoming US Secretary of Health and Human Services Sylvia Burwell,
urging her to use her newfound executive powers to waive the offending restrictions.
One letter was sent by the Alliance for Connected Care, a lobbyist group which includes
such telehealth vendors as WellPoint, Teladoc, CVS, Walgreens, Verizon, HealthSpot and
Welch Allyn as well as a number of disease and healthcare advocacy organizations. Another
came from the American Telemedicine Association, HIMSS, Qualcomm, Intel, the
Telecommunications Industry Association and a number of other businesses and interest
groups. The third letter was signed by the CEOs and presidents of 29 health systems and
ACOs.
Meanwhile, the Senate asked the industry for help
improving healthcare transparency
Not too long after healthcare transparency company Castlight Health went public, the
Senate Finance Committee sent letters to a wide assortment of healthcare stakeholders
to source input on how the federal government could improve “the availability and utility of
health care data” so that patients could more easily shop for doctors that suit their needs,
providers could deliver higher quality care, and payers could design more effective care
delivery models.
The letter specifically asked: What data sources should be made more broadly available?
How, in what form, and for what purposes should this data be conveyed? What reforms
would help reduce the unnecessary fragmentation of health care data? What reforms would
help improve the accessibility and usability of health care data for consumers, payers, and
providers? What barriers stand in the way of stakeholders using existing data sources more
effectively and what reforms should be made to overcome these barriers?
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NIH: Relatively few apply for mobile health research grants
In May the National Institutes of Health (NIH) re-issued two grant opportunities from
September 2011, to encourage mobile health developers to apply for grants that aim to
generate efficacy data.
Dr. Bill Heetderks, Director of Extramural Science Programs at NIBIB, said his
organization is basically the technology institute in NIH, and they’ve lately come to realize
that mobile technology, with its propensity to address chronic conditions, is an area of a lot
of promise — and one in which relatively few researchers are applying for NIH grants.
EU looks to better regulate mobile health
In April the European Commission announced a consultation — similar to a public
notice from the FDA here in the US — that asked digital health companies and others for
help in identifying ways to encourage and regulate mobile health, which the Commission
defines as “ways to enhance the health and wellbeing of Europeans with the use of mobile
devices, such as mobile phones, tablets, patient monitoring devices and other wireless
devices.”
The EU is looking to move the needle on a number of issues related to mobile health in
Europe, including: the safety of health apps, concerns over data misuse, lack of
interoperability, and lack of understanding of legal requirements for wellness apps.
A dozen Q2 FDA clearances for apps and digital health devices
The FDA disclosed 510(k) clearances for about a dozen digital health apps and devices
during the second quarter.
Propeller Health, formerly Asthmapolis, received FDA clearance for a platform that
includes a new smart inhaler and is geared for patients with either asthma or COPD.
In June San Francisco-based Qardio received FDA 510(k) clearance for its connected
blood pressure monitor, called QardioArm. The device went on sales for $99 on Qardio’s
website and in select stores the following week.
New Zealand-based medical device company Nexus6 received FDA clearance for its
smartphone-connected inhaler, SmartTouch, as a class II medical device. The new
SmartTouch device has been cleared as a prescribable Metered Dose Inhaler (MDI) with a
Pg. 23 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
handful of intended uses: in clinical trials; in clinical practice, and for patient self-
management.
Atlanta, Georgia-based health device maker CardioMEMS received FDA clearance for its
CardioMEMS HF System, which monitors pulmonary artery pressure. The clearance was only
for patients who have experienced New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class III heart failure
and have been hospitalized for heart failure in the previous year.
Alberta, Canada-based Calgary Scientific announced that it received a new FDA clearance
for its diagnostic medical imaging software, called ResolutionMD, that enables
providers to use the mobile software for all imaging modalities, except mammography.
McKesson secured clearance for a mobile medical app called McKesson Cardiology ECG
Mobile. The web-based version of McKesson Cardiology ECG has been around for a few
years and it enables clinicians to analyze and review ECG waveforms captured by a variety
of vendors’ ECG devices.
InTouch Health received clearance for an app that would allow auscultation from digital
stethoscopes in near-realtime. InTouch says that up until now digital stethoscopes have
relied on store and forward technology, but InTouch’s CS App transmits live from a patient
to a doctor at a remote location.
Reflectance Medical secured a 510(k) clearance for a tablet-based version of its Multi-
Parameter Mobile CareGuide 3100 Oximeter system. The original device offers a “non-
invasive assessment of hemoglobin oxygen saturation and pH in a region of skeletal muscle
tissues beneath the oximeter sensor,” according to the company.
Vital Connect received FDA clearance for its Vital Connect Platform, which is the system
that supports the company’s peel-and-stick, Bandaid-like vital signs monitor HealthPatch.
The wearable device captures single lead ECG, heart rate, HRV, respiratory rate, skin
temperature, body posturing (fall detection), steps, stress, and sleep staging.
Gauss Surgical announced that it has received de novo FDA clearance for an app that
uses the iPad’s camera to estimate the amount of blood lost during a surgery and captured
with surgical sponges. The system is called the Triton Fluid Management System.
Entra Health Systems, one of the earliest entrants into the smartphone-connected
glucometer space, received clearance for the MyHealthPoint telemedicine manager, an
online and mobile software offering that would collect and store biometric data from a
variety of sources. It measures vitals including glucose, blood pressure, weight, body
composition, activity, body temperature, ECG, and pulse oximetry.
Pg. 24 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
Mobile operators make few digital health announcements in Q2
There wasn’t a lot of action from mobile operators this quarter, but Sprint and Verizon made announcements in late Q2.
Samsung announced a new version of its latest smartphone, called the Samsung Galaxy
S5 Sport. The new phone was developed in partnership with Sprint and
MapMyFitness. Through this partnership with Sprint, users of the S5 Sport get access to 12
months of a MapMyFitness MVP membership. The MVP membership offers extra features on
top of tracking fitness including customized audio coaching, training plans, and live tracking.
Customers who are on Sprint Family plans also get six months of Spotify premium, while
other Sprint customers get three months of Spotify premium. Even after this period of time,
through this partnership, those using Sprint Fit Live can access Spotify’s workout playlists.
A few weeks after Sprint’s announcement, Verizon launched a mobile-centric video
visits product that physician groups and others can use to provide real-time, remote care
to patients. Virtual Visits had been 18 months in the making, Verizon’s Director of Mobile
Health Julie Kling told MobiHealthNews in an interview at the time, and while it could see
integration with Verizon’s FDA cleared remote patient monitoring platform in the future, the
company shared no immediate plans to do so.
Verizon’s Virtual Visits can be white-labeled or co-branded by providers and other
customers. Kling said that some have requested that Verizon’s brand stay attached to the
offering since so many consumers are familiar with it. Providers may work with a remote
care physicians network that Verizon has a partnership with to provide an after-hours safety
net to patients, while using the Virtual Visits offering with their own provider team during
normal business hours.
enture capital investments f/Q2 2014
By Aditi Pai
Proteus Digital Health raises $172 million: Redwood City, California-based
Proteus Digital Health raised an additional $52 million from undisclosed investors following a
whopping $120 million raise the company announced a month prior. That brings Proteus’
latest round of funding — its seventh — to $172 million. By our count the company’s total
known funding is now close to $400 million, which makes it one of the most-funded, private
companies in digital health. When it announced the first part of this round of funding in
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Pg. 25 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
June, the company attributed the funds to “major new institutional investors based in the
United States, Europe and Asia” and said the money would help it continue to commercialize
its ingestible sensor system at scale, as well as to continue demonstrating the value of the
technology on health outcomes and costs. Read More
NantHealth raises $135 million: NantHealth raised $135 million from three investors.
The amount almost certainly includes the $100 million NantHealth raised last quarter from
the Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA), that country’s sovereign investment fund, as well as
the investment Blackberry contributed in April. This latest round brings NantHealth’s total
announced funding to about $166 million. NantHealth offers a cloud-based, clinical decision
support platform used by at least 250 hospitals, according to the company. Read More
Doximity raises $54 million: San Mateo-based medical communications platform and
physician referral engine Doximity raised $54 million in a round co-led by DFJ and T. Rowe
Price Associates. Morgan Stanley Investment Management as well as returning investors
Emergence Capital Partners, Morgenthaler Ventures, and InterWest Partners also
participated in the round. This brings the company’s total funding to $81 million. CEO Jeff
Tangney told MobiHealthNews in an email that he believes this funding puts Doximity in a
position to reach every doctor in the United States. Read More
Chrono Theraputics raises $32 million: Chrono Therapeutics, a Hayward, California-
based company working on a new wearable for smoking cessation and drug delivery, raised
$32 million in its first round of funding. The round was led by Canaan Partners and 5 am
Ventures. Additional contributors included Fountain Healthcare Partners, and two strategic
investors: GE Ventures and the Mayo Clinic. The company’s flagship product SmartStop,
which has been in development since 2004 and has been funded so far by a combination of
NIH grants and the founders’ personal income, is a wearable device that would smartly
deliver nicotine to the wearer at strategic times. The objective of the wearable is to not just
alleviate cravings, but actually prevent them. Read More
Voluntis raises $29 million: Paris, France-based Voluntis, a developer of companion apps
for medical devices, has raised $29 million in its fourth round of funding. The round was led
by Bpifrance Large Venture and international venture capital firm Innovation Capital. Other
contributors included Luxembourg-based Vesalius Biocapital and US-based Qualcomm
Incorporated, through its venture capital arm, Qualcomm Ventures, as well as existing
investors, CapDecisif Management, CM-CIC Capital Innovation, and Sham. Voluntis is
mostly focused on diabetes management software, but it doesn’t sell its apps directly to
consumers. Instead it works with pharmaceutical and medical device companies. Read
More
Pg. 26 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
Omada Health raises $23 million: San Francisco-based Omada Health, an online and
mobile diabetes prevention program, raised $23 million in a round led by Andreessen
Horowitz, with participation from Kaiser Permanente Ventures and return backers U.S.
Venture Partners and The Vertical Group. This brings Omada Health’s total funding to $28.5
million. Omada Health’s program, Prevent, lasts 16 weeks and aims to help those that are
at-risk for Type 2 diabetes make positive health behavior changes. The program was based
on a 2002 NIH Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) intervention that produced significant
results for prediabetics. Read More
Senseonics raises $20 million: Germantown, Maryland-based continuous glucose monitor
developer Senseonics raised $20 million from existing investors Anthem Capital, Delphi
Ventures, Greenspring Associates, Healthcare Ventures, and New Enterprise Associates. This
brings the company’s total funding to at least $84 million to date. Senseonics will use the
funds to obtain a CE mark and start investigational device exemption (IDE) trials in the US.
Completing an IDE trial allows the company to use the device in a clinical study to collect
safety and effectiveness data, according to the FDA. Read More
Sotera Wireless raises $20 million: Medical device maker Sotera Wireless raised $20
million in equity, securities, and options. This brings their total announced funding to almost
$50 million. The SEC filing also showed that Sotera hopes to raise another $33 million.
Existing Sotera investors include Safeguard Scientifics, Delphi Ventures, Sanderling
Ventures, Qualcomm Ventures, EDBI, Intel Capital, Cerner Capital, and the West Health
Investment Fund. Sotera’s main product, called ViSi Mobile, monitors blood pressure, heart
rate or pulse rate, electrocardiogram (ECG) or heart rhythm, blood oxygenation level,
respiration rate and skin temperature from a wearable sensor system with a wristworn
screen. Read More
eVariant raises $18.3 million: Farmington, Connecticut-based physician communication
platform and CRM company eVariant raised $18.3 million in a round led by Lightspeed
Venture Partners with additional funding from Dignity Health, salesforce.com and existing
investor Health Enterprise Partners. This brings the company’s total funding to at least $26
million to date. eVariant offers healthcare organizations a platform to analyze the data they
collect, execute marketing campaigns, and improve patient engagement. The platform is
built on salesforce.com. Read More
iRhythm raises $17 million: iRhythm Technologies, maker of the Zio patch peel-and-stick
heart monitor, raised $17 million in a round led by Novo A/S, a Danish life sciences
investment firm. Previous investor Norwest Venture Partners also participated in the round.
This brings the company’s total disclosed funding to about $85 million, based on SEC filings
and company announcements. The Zio patch is a small wearable sensor, used for multi-day
monitoring of arrhythmias in cardiac patients (up to a fortnight). Read More
Pg. 27 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
HealthSpot raises $8 million: HealthSpot, a Dublin, Ohio-based company building
telemedicine kiosks for workplace and retail locations, has raised $8 million from
undisclosed investors, bringing the current raise, which began in March 2013, to $18 million
total. This is the company’s first round since 2012 and brings their total known funding to
$23 million. HealthSpot kiosks are designed for supermarkets, pharmacies, and healthcare
facility waiting rooms. Read More
RedBrick Health raises $7.5 million: Patient engagement platform maker RedBrick
Health raised $7.5 million, according to an SEC filing. This brings the company’s total
disclosed funding to at least $46 million. The Minneapolis-based company, which was
founded in 2006, provides a platform for health plans on which members can take a health
assessment, track their fitness through app and device integration, and complete challenges
that motivate users to stay fit. Read More
Healthbox raises $7 million: Chicago-based digital health accelerator Healthbox Global
Partners, Healthbox’s parent company since 2013, raised $7 million. The round was led by
Intermountain Healthcare, Health Care Service Corporation, and Chicago Pacific Founders.
Healthbox will use the funds to launch three new business units. Since its founding, this is
the first time strategic investors have invested in Healthbox’s parent company. Typically
companies invest in the individual accelerator programs that Healthbox launches in various
cities. Read More
Valencell raises $7 million: Valencell, a Raleigh, North Carolina-based company that
powers health and medical sensors in some wearable devices, most notably in sensor-
equipped headphones, raised $7 million in its third round of funding. The new round brings
the company’s total funding to $13 million, excluding an additional $3 million in grants. The
round was lead by new investor WSJ Joshua Fund, a recently founded Texas-based investor
group. Existing investors TDF Ventures, True Ventures and Best Buy Capital also
contributed. Valencell also announced the hiring of a new CEO, Michael Dering, who most
recently served as CEO of service management company ServiceBench. Read More
Lifesum raises $6.7 million: Stockholm, Sweden-based calorie counting app company
Lifesum (formerly known as ShapeUp Club) has raised $6.7 million in its first round of
funding led by Germany’s Bauer Media Group and SparkLabs Global Ventures. The company
has 4.5 million members and 6.5 million downloads in Europe for its Android and iOS apps.
At the end of last year it reported having about half a million monthly active users. The app
aims to make it easier for users to track what they eat and how they exercise. It offers
barcode scanning for food tracking, food and exercise charts, quicker entry for often-
consumed foods, and a database of millions of food items. Read More
Pg. 28 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
Whoop raises $6 million: Boston-based startup Whoop raised $6 million to build out its
continuous heartrate-sensing wristworn activity tracker, according to an SEC filing. This
brings the company’s total announced funding to $9.6 million to date. In the most recent
filing, Atlas Venture Partner Jeff Fagnan was listed as an investor. Whoop plans to create a
device that continuously monitors the wearer’s heart rate, quantifies the intensity of their
workouts, and monitors how much recovery time the user needs. The device is not designed
for casual users but rather for athletes. Read More
Mango Health raises $5.25 million: Mango Health, a startup using gamification principals
to work on medication adherence, has raised $5.25 million in first round funding from
Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. The company, which participated in the Rock Health digital
health accelerator in 2012, had previously raised at least $3 million in a seed round from
Floodgate Fund, First Round Capital, Baseline Ventures, Bullpen Capital and individual
investors. CEO Jason Oberfest told MobiHealthNews that the money raised will go toward
scaling and developing the company’s enterprise business. Read More
Pear Sports raises $5 million: Irvine, California-based activity tracking and coaching
company Pear Sports raised $5 million in a round led by existing investors Innovate
Partners and Nordic Ventures. Smart TV company VIZIO also joined the round as a strategic
investor. Pear will use the funds to expand sales and marketing for its app as well as white-
label product, which was announced in November and is called ‘Powered by Pear’. The
company leverages well known coaches’ and celebrity athletes’ brands to recruit users to
the platform. Read More
Weave raises $5 million: Lehi, Utah-based VoIP communications service for dentists,
Weave, has raised $5 million led by A Capital, with participation from Homebrew, Fuel
Capital, SV Angel, Initialized Capital, and Y Combinator. Weave has focused on dentist
offices in North America as its first target market. Weave plans to use the funds to build out
its product’s features, expand marketing, and move beyond dentistry. The company is also
planning to build out its mobile offerings in the near future. Read More
Bellabeat raises $4.5 million: Mountain View, California-based pregnancy tracking
company Bellabeat raised $4.5 million from SVAngel, CrunchFund, Universal Music Group
and angel investors. With the Bellabeat device, pregnant women can listen to and record
their babies’ heartbeat and track other aspects of their pregnancy from the companion app,
including movement, kicks, and prenatal care. Read More
Aledade raises $4.5 million: Former National Coordinator for Health Information
Technology at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Dr. Farzad Mostashari,
launched a startup, called Aledade, that will partner with independent primary care
Pg. 29 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
physicians to help them join or form accountable care organizations. Aledade offers primary
care doctors with the tools to create their own ACO. Read More
Augmedix raises $4.1 million: San Francisco-based Augmedix, one of several startups
developing Google Glass software and modifications for hospital use cases, has raised $7.3
million in a round led by DCM and Emergence Capital Partners. This includes the $3.2
million the company announced in March, and $4.1 million in additional new funding. The
company also announced two other milestones: it has been named a certified Glass partner
by Google, and it has announced a partnership with Dignity Health, the culmination of a
pilot that’s been under way since January. Read More
Sherpaa raises $4 million: New York City-based digital healthcare service, called
Sherpaa, raised $4 million, according to an SEC filing. According to a report in March from
the Wall Street Journal, Tumblr Funder David Karp invested at least $500,000 in the round.
This brings Sherpaa’s total announced funding to $5.85 million. Existing investors include
O’Reilly Alpha Tech Ventures, First Round Capital, Collaborative Fund, and angels including,
ex-president of Tumblr John Maloney, and OpenX and Jirafe founder Scott Switzer. Sherpaa
aims to help employers cut their healthcare costs by making physicians virtually available to
their clients’ employees. Read More
Big Health raises $3.3 million: London-based digital health tool maker Big Health raised
$3.3 million from Index Ventures and Forward Partners to expand into the United States.
The company planed to open an office on the west coast. The company’s first tool, Sleepio,
aims to help users fix their sleeping issues. Read More
Vivify Health raises $3 million: Plano, Texas-based remote monitoring startup Vivify
Health (formerly Intuitive Health) raised $3 million, according to an SEC filing. This brings
Vivify Health’s total announced funding to at least $6.4 million to date. Existing Vivify Health
investors include Ascension Health Ventures and Heritage Group. The latest round included
two investors who contributed $1.5 million each. Vivify Health offers a patient engagement
platform targeted at hospitals, health plans, home health caregivers, and pharmaceutical
companies. Read More
Iagnosis raises $2.8 million: Iagnosis, parent company of virtual visit skin care company
DermatologistOnCall, raised $2.8 million from undisclosed angel investors. This brings
Iagnosis’ total funding to date to $8.8 million. Chief Strategy Officer and cofounder Larry
Eakin told MobiHealthNews that he plans to use the funds for marketing efforts at
DermatologistOnCall. Read More
Independa raises $2.8 million: San Diego-based Independa, which has developed a
telehealth platform for seniors, raised about $2.8 million in its second round of funding,
Pg. 30 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
according an SEC filing. The company announced part of the round in October 2103 when it
had raised $1.85 million of the round, which it said was led by longtime backer City Hill
Ventures. Previous investors in the company include LG Electronics USA, which has
partnered with Independa to pre-load its home health platform on some of internet-
connected TVs for use in senior care facilities. Independa’s flagship offering is called Angela,
a tablet-based application that helps manage the lives and care of elderly patients who
choose to stay in their homes rather than move to assisted living or nursing homes. Read
More
Segterra raises $2.5 million: Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Segterra, developer of
the InsideTracker platform, raised $2.5 million in funding led by strategic investor Henry
Kauftheil, who is chairman of real estate investment firm ACG Equities and CSO and co-
founder of stealthy consumer health startup SelfHealth.me. The funding raise, which was
first reported by Xconomy, brings the company’s total up to $4 million since its founding in
2009. InsideTracker is a direct-to-consumer health analytics platform that starts with a
blood test to identify certain biomarkers, and then uses to results to help users make
healthier decisions about diet, exercise, and other lifestyle choices. Read More
Talkspace raises $2.5 million: Talkspace, a New York City-based startup offering therapy
sessions via the web and mobile devices, has raised $2.5 million. Spark Capital and Soft
Bank Capital participated in the round, which was the company’s first. In addition, AOL
President of Video Ran Harnevo will join the company’s board. The startup is trying to
address a perceived problem in the mental health field: because of various factors including
time, expense, and social stigma, many people (between 60 and 70 percent) who could
benefit from therapy don’t get help. Read More
CrowdMed raises $2.4 million: Crowdsourcing diagnosis platform CrowdMed raised $2.4
million from actor Patrick Dempsey, NEA, Andreessen Horowitz, Greylock Partners, SV
Angel, Khosla Ventures and Y Combinator. Grey’s Anatomy actor Dempsey will also help to
expand the company’s platform by developing new partnerships with insurance companies
so that patients are incentivized to use the platform. This recent funding is a continuation of
the round CrowdMed started in April 2013. CrowdMed applies the theory of a prediction
market — that when a large enough population bets real or fake money on predictions in a
system similar to a stock exchange, their bets will reflect their confidence and, in aggregate,
will create a robust predictive model — to healthcare. Read More
HeiaHeia raises $2 million: Finland-based H2 Wellbeing, maker of employee wellness
platform HeiaHeia, raised just over $2 million (1.5 million euros) in a round led by Finland’s
Wallstreet Financial Services. Additional backers included unnamed angels and a Finnish
funding agency called Tekes. Until now, H2 has run on its own revenues, which the
company started generating just two months into its launch, and government grants. CEO
Pg. 31 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
and co-founder Jussi Raisanen told MobiHealthNews the company was waiting until it had a
scalable business model before seeking funding. Read More
Consumer Physics raises $4 million: A new smartphone-connected device for measuring
the nutritional content of food has raised $2.2 million on Kickstarter, on top of $4 million to
$5 million in funding from venture capitalists including Khosla Ventures. SCiO is a tiny
spectrometer that promises to send information about food, nutrition, and medication to a
user’s smartphone via Bluetooth Low Energy. Tel Aviv, Israel-based Consumer Physics, the
company behind SCiO says it has built two prototypes and is raising money on Kickstarter to
manufacture the final version, which it plans to ship to backers in January of this
year. Read More
Owlet raises $1.85 million: Provo-based newborn wearable device maker Owlet raised
$1.85 million in funding from a mix of investors that included R/GA, Techstars, Azimuth
Ventures, Life Sciences Angel Network, Utah-based Peak Ventures, Eniac Ventures, ff
Ventures, Brand Band Project and John Ason, an early investor in Diapers.com. Owlet
crowdfunded its ankle-worn, health sensing sock for babies last year. It raised about
$300,000 from supporters to build the device, which will connect to parent’s smartphones
via Bluetooth 4.0 (low energy). Read More
SwipeSense raises $1.7 million: Evanston, Illinois-based SwipeSense, which is
developing a smart hand hygiene sensor, raised $1.7 million, according to an SEC filing.
This brings the company’s total funding to at least $2.5 million to date. SwipeSense is a
graduate of the accelerator Healthbox’s first class, which was announced in December 2011.
Healthbox helped fund SwipeSense’s first round. The company aims to eliminate
dependency on hand hygiene campaigns that healthcare providers use to stay compliant
with Joint Commission requirements. Read More
Wellframe raises $1.5 million: Wellframe, a Boston-based patient engagement and care
management technology company, raised $1.5 million in seed funding from a bevy of high
profile investors and entrepreneurs, such as athenahealth CEO Jonathan Bush. Other
investors in the round include Tim Draper, founder and managing director of Draper Fisher
Jurvetson; Sir Sabaratnam Arulkumaran, president of the British Medical Association; Russ
Nash, former global managing director at Accenture; Carl Byers, a venture partner at
Fidelity Biosciences; and James Nahirny, founder and managing partner at Leerink Capital
Partners. Wellframe’s platform combines a patient-facing engagement app, which includes
educational components, exercises, and tracking features, with a clinician-facing dashboard
for data access and HIPAA-compliant two way messaging. Read More
Fitnet raises $1.4 million: Instructional video fitness app maker Fitnet raised $1.4 million
from Valleys’ Ventures and CIT Gap Funds for its fitness app, Fitnet. Before this funding
Pg. 32 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
round, Fitnet was awarded a $300,000 grant from the National Science Foundation and with
some startup capital from the founder, the company’s total funding to date is just under $2
million. Fitnet’s iOS apps offers users guided workouts that range from cardio and strength
training to yoga classes. All classes are five minutes. Read More
KelDoc raises $1.4 million: Paris-based KelDoc, an doctor appointment booking app,
raised $1.4 million (1 million euros) from existing investor Alven Capital and other angel
investors. This brings the company’s total funding to about $2 million. Keldoc plans to use
these funds to expand across major cities in Europe. Currently, the service is only offered in
France. Read More
Jointly raises $1.3 million: San Juan Capistrano, California-based remote monitoring
analytics company Jointly Health raised $1.3 million from investors including Frost Venture
Partners and Reed Elsevier Ventures. This brings the company’s total funding to date to
$3.8 million. According to CEO Dean Sawyer, the company’s first product is still awaiting
FDA 510(k) clearance, but they have their first few health plan customers lined up once that
clearance is secured. The funding will be used to hire additional team members and
otherwise prepare for those implementations. Read More
TruVitals raises $1 million: Gainesville, Florida-based TruVitals has received an
undisclosed investment from the Florida Institute. However, the company has told
MobiHealthNews that the funding, combined with angel investments and grants, will bring
the company’s total funding to a little under $1 million. TruVitals is developing a non-
contact heart rate, respiration, and motion sensor that uses radar technology. It will soon
measure temperature as well. Read More
Filament Labs raises $1 million: Austin, Texas-based Filament Labs raised $1 million in a
round led by Mercury Fund with additional funding from Corinthian Health Services and
Arcadia Home Care. The company plans to use the funds to grow its digital care plan
delivery tool, Patient IO. The product, available on iOS and Android devices, turns the care
plan into a list of daily tasks complete with reminders and health tracking. Read More
First Warning Systems raises $560,000: First Warning Systems, the Reno, Nevada-
based company that’s working on wearable sensors for early detection of breast cancer, has
raised $560,000, according to CEO Rob Royea. Steven Welch, a private investor and former
COO of BP (not to be confused with DreamIt Health founder Steve Welch) led the round
with a $300,000 contribution. The rest came from a syndicate of investors in Singapore,
where First Warning intends to launch its product in early 2015. Read More
RxRevu raises $540,000: Denver, Colorado-based RxRevu, which offers a medication
transparency tool, has raised $540,000, according to a recent SEC filing that also notes the
Pg. 33 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
company hopes to raise another $210,000. RxRevu founder Carm Huntress told
MobiHealthNews that the seed round’s exact total is undisclosed but that it is “well over”
$500,000. Investors in the round include a Denver, Colorado-based incubator Galvanize and
other unnamed angels. RxRevu also recently announced that they will be a part of Startup
Health’s next class. Read More
G-Tech Medical raises $350,000: Palo Alto, California-based G-Tech Medical, which is
developing a wearable, disposable sensor patch for patients with gastrointestinal problems,
received funding from Peter Thiel’s nonprofit fund, Breakout Labs. The grant was for
$350,000. G-Tech is also looking to raise additional money to fund its next phase of
development. G-Tech’s patches measure the electrical activity from the stomach, small
intestine and colon — which the company says is similar to capturing an “EKG for the
gut”. Read More
Sportsetter raises $276,000: Sportsetter, maker of an app that helps people stick to a
workout routine, raised $276,540 (200,000 euros) and launched an iOS version of its app.
The company has been around since at least 2012. The app helps users find variety in their
day-to-day workout routines so that on any given day they could play golf, work out on a
machine at the gym, participate in a yoga class, or try out a new rock gym. Read More
DocSpera raises undisclosed sum: Sunyvale, California-based Compliant Innovations
raised an undisclosed sum from Lifeforce Ventures and Attractor Ventures for its online
doctor communication platform, called DocSpera. The platform allows surgeons to
collaborate with their care teams as well as other physicians before operations and
treatments. Providers can use the platform to send messages that contain text, photos, or
videos in private groups or private messages. Images and text that might be shared include
x-rays and surgery schedules. Read More
By Mr. Kevin Clayton
CEO & Co-Founder of Be Bold Technologies, LLC
September 17, 2014
Pg. 34 Q2 2014 Digital Health State of the Industry
Contact Information
KEVIN CLAYTON
CEO
Tel [Telephone]
Fax [Fax]
[Email Address]
Name
Title
Tel [Telephone]
Fax [Fax]
[Email Address]
Company Information BE BOLD TECHNOLOGIES, LLC
4321 Kingwood Drive, Suite 140, Houston, TX 77339
Tel 1 (800) 505-0639
Fax 1 (713) 370-3152
www.WearablesGroup.com
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