Friday, June 10, 2016

Health Startup Digest - 6/10/16

 
Startup Highlight: XipXip is creating a tool for EDs to conduct fast, point-of-care blood tests for p
 
June 10 - Issue #16

Health Startup Digest

Curated by R. Scott Munro, the latest news and information about startups and innovations in healthcare.

Startup Highlight: Xip
Xip is creating a tool for EDs to conduct fast, point-of-care blood tests for patients to detect everything from troponin for heart attacks, to STDs, and other tests that typically require longer turn around. While point-of-care tests exist today, as the company mentions, they, “require unwieldy instruments and often cannot detect low yet meaningful levels of troponin.” Seems quite interesting if they can get the science to work beyond heart attack detection. 
As always, if you come across news, announcements, videos, or podcasts that you think the other 4,900+ subscribers would benefit from, e-mail me at scott.munro@startupdigestmail.com or tweet @R_Scott_Munro and subscribe to the digest, here.
If you would like me to include a "Shout Out" let me know, and I'll throw it in the digest!

Articles:
Where are we in the Robotics Revolution? | MedTech Talk
Scientists Find Form of Crispr Gene Editing With New Capabilities | The New York Times
The Real Cause of Deadly Medical Errors | Scientific America
Freenome Raises $5.55M from Andreessen Horowitz, others | Medium
The Commonwealth Fund Case Study Special Online Virtual Issue | The Journal of Delivery Science and Innovation
Shout Outs
IDB - Venture Night
Quote of the Week:
“All of this begs the question why—why is our system so sloppy? The answer: because it can be. Because the costs of medical errors are hidden. No senior hospital administrator or Washington policymaker heard about Mr. Jones's death. Even when the errors are more obvious, the financial consequences to institutions are small. And until we fundamentally shift the incentive structure of the system so that the most careful and safe systems get rewarded handsomely (and the poor performers get punished), none of the sloppiness goes away.”
- Ashish Jha, MD
This Digest is curated by:
R. Scott Munro - Utility Infielder @ DocMatter

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