Category Archives: Uncategorized

#33: Aneesh Chopra on Finding the Opportunity to Bring Innovation to Healthcare



Aneesh Chopra, Co-Founder of Hunch Analytics and Former United States Government Chief Technology Officer, discusses the challenge of bringing innovation to an industry that’s resistant to change and finding the opportunity in that. Fireside chat lead by StartUp Health’s CEO Steven Krein at Health Datapalooza 2015 in Washington, DC.


#31: Making Digital Health Invisible – Victor Penev, Edamam



Victor Penev, Founder & CEO of Startup Health company Edamam, discusses how his business is powering nutrition technology and the future of behavior change in healthcare.


#32: Steve Case on Building Successful Healthcare Startups



Steve Case, chairman and CEO of Revolution and co-founder of America Online, speaks about opportunities in the healthcare sector as it becomes transformed by technology and entrepreneurship. Fireside chat lead by StartUp Health’s CEO Steven Krein at Health Datapalooza 2014 in Washington, DC.


#30: Leveraging Unique Abilities to Drive Success – Reed Mollins, Doctor.com



Doctor.com Co-Founder and Vice President of Business Development, Reed Mollins, discusses the history of Doctor.com, how the team came together and entrepreneurial challenges and lessons learned.


#29: Three Pillars Shaping Digital Health Funding – Matt Karls, Cambia



Patient communication, consumer marketplaces and senior care are seeing a wave of activity as new startups focus on unmet needs. Matt Karls, Assistant Director of Strategic Investments at Cambia, details the impact these three areas will have on the future of digital health.


#28: Funding the Future of Digital Health – Reid Robison, MD, Tute Genomics



Tute Genomics Founder and CEO Reid Robison, MD, shares insights on how human genome sequencing will change the future of medicine and how being the first company on the StartUp Health AngelList syndicate has pushed his startup forward.


#27: Big Data for Big Results – Melissa Manice, CoheroHealth



Does a digital health startup have to choose between developing great hardware or creating accurate software? In the latest episode of StartUp Health NOW, Melissa Manice, Founder and CEO of CoheroHealth, explores how her products work seamlessly together to provide biometric data that is changing the lives of respiratory patients.


#26: Designing Digital Health for Impact in Underserved Communities – Inder Singh, Kinsa



Can a digital health startup succeed through good intentions alone? Inder Singh, Founder and CEO of smart thermometer Kinsa, explores the pros and cons of starting his business with no product and no business plan, but with a purpose — to create the world’s first real-time map of human health.


#25: Can Entrepreneurs and the FDA Finally Get Along? – Jonathan Javitt, Telcare



Telcare Vice Chairman & Founder, Jonathan Javitt explores why the FDA is allowing entrepreneurs more freedom than ever before and shares his experience pushing healthcare innovation forward with three different Presidential Administrations.


#24: From Clinic to Startup: The ‘Aha Moment” of a Doctorpreneur – Bronwyn Spira, FORCE Therapeutics



FORCE Therapeutics Founder and CEO Bronwyn Spira shares her journey from physical therapist to Healthcare Transformer and explores how she’s scaling her virtual treatment platform to reach thousands of patients.

GUEST: Bronwyn Spira, CEO of FORCE Therapeutics
HOST: Steven Krein and Unity Stoakes
LOCATION: StartUp Health Studios (NYC, NY)

Show Notes and Key Takeaways

The ‘Aha’ Moment
[7:55] Bronwyn: “Healthcare is complicated. It’s very hard to solve it from the outside. If you’ve been in it for a long time, and you understand the unique issues, it helps to solve them to some degree.”
[8:50] Bronwyn: “When I think about the “aha” moment, it was when I had stepped away from my first practice that I built. It was just after I had my child, that was five years ago. It took me…I needed to step away from being in the weeds of practicing to actually understand that there was a bigger problem to solve.”
[9:19] Bronwyn: “I started thinking about what it is that patients really need to enable them to do what it was that I wanted them to do as a clinician because I realized that it wasn’t…The piece of paper wasn’t really doing the job

Physical Therapy = Big Costs
[16:24] Bronwyn: “When we looked at those episode payments, we realize that 41 percent of the total episode cost was in the post‑acute care phase. That means not surgery, not anesthesiology, not hospital fees, not medication. Post‑acute care. That’s physical therapy.”
[10:01] Bronwyn: “Then we realized that as healthcare was changing, this could actually solve an even greater problem which is an $850 billion problem. That is how much the US healthcare system spends on musculoskeletal disease every year, and growing.”

Patient Expectations
[24:42] Bronwyn: “One thing that we have found with a lot of patients is that anxiety about recovery is all about not knowing what to expect.”
[25:16] Bronwyn: “We really feel that because healthcare is so personal, because we are dealing with people and not things, we have to bring in this human element.”
[26:36] Bronwyn: “Because activated patients, which are patients that are engaged and active in their care, are more successful patients.”

FORCE Therapeutics in the Future
[29:18] Bronwyn: “My goal will be that FORCE is the standard of care for post‑acute recovery.”
[29: 40] Bronwyn: “That opportunity is actually to collect data on protocols that are successful. If providers need to understand what’s working and what isn’t, we house all of that data.”
[31:34] Bronwyn: “We are so excited about this company that it’s just fun to talk about it. That’s a big piece of it.”

How Can Bronwyn Help You?
[33:36] Bronwyn: “I would tell people to be confident that what they believe to be true is true. It’s so easy in the early days to doubt yourself, to doubt your vision, to doubt your process.You will make mistakes. We made tons of mistakes along the way. At the same time, those mistakes have brought us to this place.”
[34:12] Bronwyn: “It’s all just been following that vision of helping the patients, and reinventing health care. You just have to keep your eye on that the whole time.”
[35:39] Bronwyn: “You just have to be a sponge. Absorb everything. Stuff that you can’t use right now you put away somewhere, but it’s there so you can access it later.”