It’s
8:15 on Friday evening. I’m almost through editing the job description for a user interface engineer after sending off an introductory slide deck to a potential client. Today I met with a business development prospect, held calls with a potential advisor, a potential client, and finally made those changes to the website. There’s not time to write this but when will there be?
I’m part of a growing trend of academics, programmers, and clinicians taking the startup path to try to make healthcare a better place. In fact, record breaking amounts of venture funding are pouring into healthcare with 2014 seeing $4.13 billion in digital health venture funding and 2015 showing no signs of slowing. Established tech companies not typically associated with healthcare including Apple, Samsung, Google, and IBM are getting in on the act with substantial investments. It seems that nearly every hospital and insurer is launching its own incubator or innovation fund.
The real question is why, after decades of lagging behind nearly all other industries in the adoption and use of information technology, does healthcare seem to suddenly be such a hotbed of activity?
The answer: data matters like never before in healthcare.






