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Tag: Hinge Health

Sword Health, the Hinge Health S1, and me

By MATTHEW HOLT

The big news in the comeback of digital health is that Hinge Health filed its S1 and is looking to go public soon. I suspect that they’d have preferred to get the IPO done late last year when the AI bubble was expanding rather than deflating, but timing the market is tough! Nonetheless Hinge is almost profitable and at over $350m in revenue at a growth clip of some 75% last year, in terms of a show pony to trot out, it’s about as good as the digital health field has got. The problem is that the last round in 2021 was at a $6bn+ ZIRP-era valuation with Tiger & Coatue paying the idiot price because Teladoc was trading at $15bn market cap then (albeit down from $30bn a year before that!). That is, err, no longer the case. There’s a bunch of weirdness in the IPO structure to pay those guys back, but the main point is that the likely valuation will be in the $1.5-2.5bn range. 

But there’s another problem. And it’s one I have some personal experience with. I must stress that my experience is not with Hinge.

As it happens I did a video interview at Hinge’s booth at HLTH in 2022 when my back collapsed, and I got to try out their Enso device (it helped a bit but not much after the first few minutes using it). I discussed the process with PT Lori Walter and got a quick interview with President Jim Pursely (an old Livongo hand BTW). 

But this past summer I used the services of their main competitor, Sword Health. As far as I can tell the two companies are very similar in their process and services, both with self-service exercises delivered via the smartphone and both moving from remote care from therapists to AI therapists. But I could be wrong. So for this article I am extrapolating from one company to the other to look at the field of MSK digital services overall.

In total, I thought the Sword experience was good as a standalone program. But the problem was that it was standalone.

My problem was with my left knee. I had a lot of knee surgery in 2002-4 as the result of snowboarding into a tree (Hint. If you snowboard, try to make sure you and the board go the same side of the tree). More than 20 years later in 2024 I managed somehow to induce terrible pain in the knee running for a ferry in January, a train in May and an airport shuttle in June. (It seems that travel and my knee disagree). This didn’t stop me strapping up, taking drugs and snowboarding in the 2024 winter season but it certainly slowed me down a whole lot. Around this time there were many reports of people much younger than me getting their knees replaced.

So I thought I should do something about it. My Blue Shield of California plan offers Solera which is an agglomeration marketplace of digital health apps and services. Sword Health is their PT app, so I selected it, enrolled and off I went.

Note that there was zero integration with my PCP, any orthopedic surgeon, any clinical person at the health plan or basically anyone. This was purely patient-driven and managed.

With Sword I had a 15 min intro call on June 6 – then was sent a box containing a generic tablet and six sensors which fit into straps that you attach to your lower and upper legs and arms.

There was a conversation in the app with a PT and then it spat out a selection of exercises for me. The example below is my second exercise session. If you want to check out more, I have put more of the exercise and the chat with the PT here.

Sword suggested, instead of regular 45-60 minute physical PT sessions, that I did four 15 minutes sessions a week. Essentially one every other day.

The end result was that I did eight sessions between June 12 & June 30.

Continue reading…

Adventures in health care — Hinge Health

At the HLTH conference in Vegas the week before Thanksgiving, I decided to embark on another adventure in health care. Somehow I badly hurt my back and was barely able to walk when I found myself at the Hinge Health booth. Could they give me any help? As it turned out they could. I met physical therapist Lori Wolter who showed me (and used me as a guinea pig for) their Enso device and got a quick update on Hinge Health’s progress from its President Jim Pursley.

#Healthin2Point00, Episode 239: Hinge, Femtec, Science37, Augmedix

On a special Saturday edition of Health in 2 Point 00, Jess and I talk about her amazing forecasting and the huge scale of one deal. Yes, the Tiger pounces and Hinge Health takes its total raise to $1 billion. There’s also an complex combo deal for Femtec, raising $38m buying Birchbox and more, and we give a quick mention to the brief history of public companies Science 37 & Augmedix – Matthew Holt

Hinge Health’s CEO on $3B Valuation, Stretch Toward 2022 IPO

By JESSICA DaMASSA, WTF HEALTH

Hinge Health kicked off 2021 with a massive $300M Series D, driving the digital health musculoskeletal care company to a $3B valuation that, normally, would have sent health tech pundits into full-on IPO rumor mode…except that Hinge Health’s co-founder & CEO Daniel Perez beat them to it! We get into the details behind those comments (from what shall now be known as “the chatty Reuters interview”) where he not only revealed the company’s IPO plans, but also talked about how Hinge is well on it’s way to hit $200M in revenue. If 2021 is a year that Dan says will be focused on getting the business “operationally mature” enough to go public, what, exactly will be on the agenda? We dive into the competitive landscape, talk market size (Dan says more than 50% of employees on employer sponsored plans already have access to Hinge Health), and explore whether or not there are designs to expand into comorbidities common to back and joint pain, like mental health, obesity, diabetes, etc. Says Dan, “We’re going to use the capital to really invest in our innovation and R&D team and to stay different. We’re not just going to do the obvious moves.” Tune in for all the details on exactly what that means and why Dan thinks it’s central to Hinge Health’s market leadership in the MSK care space.

Health in 2 Point 00, Episode 108 | OneMedical IPO, Hinge Health, & Humana

Today on Health in 2 Point 00, we’re starting out with a riddle: what’s the similarity between the 49ers Super Bowl performance and digital health? Find out on Episode 108, where Jess and I discuss other news in health tech starting off with another IPO, OneMedical. Now worth more than Livongo at $2.7 billion, this went better than anyone could’ve expected. Hinge Health raises $90 million in a Series C round, offering physical therapy at home and tapping into the loads of waste that goes towards back surgeries. Finally, Humana partners with a private equity company to expand primary care centers, what is the deal with this? —Matthew Holt

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