Groundbreaking accelerator launches for medtech entrepreneurs

Published: 9-Apr-2018

Innovation platform will help UK healthcare companies with global ambitions

  • HS accelerator programme will build and scale UK health-tech businesses with global ambitions
  • It will help corporates drive healthcare innovation and connect with partners
  • Programme was founded by NHS doctors, entrepreneurs and start-up advisors

A ground-breaking new accelerator programme has been launched for businesses using technology to tackle the world’s most-pressing healthcare challenges.

The ‘HS.’ programme will build and scale healthcare technology businesses, help larger organisations drive healthcare innovation at a corporate level, and position the UK at the forefront of innovation in global healthcare.

More than $23billion has been invested in healthcare start-ups globally over the past seven years.

The HS programme will bring together brilliant minds with a singular focus: solving the world’s-most-pressing healthcare challenges with technology

However, few accelerator programmes are in place to sustainably launch and scale these health-tech businesses; and even fewer are able to offer their members deep insights and guidance on how to successfully bring healthcare technologies to market.

HS will fill this gap, with a programme built around the needs of health-tech start-ups and an unparalleled team of healthcare experts and mentors.

The accelerator aims to bring the most-talented individuals and most-innovative companies together to work on solutions for the world’s-largest healthcare problems.

Dr Alex Young, chief executive and co-founder of HS, said: “We’re approaching a pivotal moment in something that affects every one of us, every day: our health.

Healthcare is on the cusp of radical transformation and for the first time we will soon begin taking charge of our own health data.

The HS programme will harness the potential that change holds and bring together brilliant minds with a singular focus: solving the world’s-most-pressing healthcare challenges with technology.

“Impact comes from scale and we want to build UK health companies that scale internationally, to impact patients around the world and make the UK a hub of excellence for health-tech.”

Dr Young is a trauma and orthopaedic surgeon by training. During medical school, he built and sold his first company before going on to found an award-winning medical education and publishing company. His latest company, Virti, is an immersive video training platform based in Silicon Valley and London.

With our first cohort of businesses on board, and the programme now open to corporate partners, we look forward to guiding their journey in tackling some of the world’s-biggest healthcare problems with technology

Dr James Somauroo, his co-founder and chief product officer, has most recently led the DigitalHealth.London Accelerator - a £3.4m project in partnership with NHS organisations, healthcare charities, MedCity, and the EU Regional Development Fund; providing market access to the NHS for high-potential healthcare businesses. He was also previously an Innovation Fellow for NHS England.

The HS co-founders are joined by a seasoned group of clinical experts, start-up advisors, and mentors from the likes of Healthcare UK, MedCity, the BMJ, the Department for International Trade, Johnson & Johnson, and Philips.

For entrepreneurs and scale-ups, the HS programme will place an emphasis on guiding and developing them as individuals and as businesses; and will equip them with deep insights on how to achieve ‘product-patient fit’, matching them with clinical experts and patient groups, even in their early stages.

At an event hosted by the Royal Society of Medicine in London last week, HS also revealed its first cohort of entrepreneurs - 30 talented individuals across 13 companies who were chosen from over 1,000 applicants after a rigorous selection process that focused on ‘talent and traction, before idea’.

Groundbreaking accelerator launches for medtech entrepreneurs

The first cohort comprises:

  • Bioregenerative Technologies: Uses intrinsic biological mechanisms to regenerate musculoskeletal tissues without surgery
  • Feebris: An AI-powered mobile health platform for diagnosis and monitoring of children and the elderly
  • FitXR: Creates at-home fitness products that motivate and reward users using Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality
  • Healthchain: A blockchain-based health data start-up connecting your health data with researchers and healthcare providers
  • MRI.AI: Uses computer vision algorithms to better interpret MRI scans
  • Orbiject: A self-injection management system to empower diabetic patients and aid healthcare workers
  • Qdoctor: A telehealth platform with an emphasis on quality of care provided
  • RiseIQ: A voice-bot coaching platform to help dementia sufferers and their carers
  • Respond: Using cognitive insights and computer vision to help people with the early signs of dementia
  • i-rehab: Intelligent, robotic prosthesis to help amputees regain function and rehab more quickly
  • Sermaurej: Uses automatic speech recognition, natural language processing and machine learning to make recording medical notes a breeze
  • Vesalian: Making patient decision-making easier by providing accurate, intuitive and useful explanations on medical risks
  • XenBot: A chatbot that uses introspective questioning and AI to help you organise your mind and concentrate on what matters most

Impact comes from scale and we want to build UK health companies that scale internationally, to impact patients around the world and make the UK a hub of excellence for health-tech

Dr Somauroo said: “The HS founding team has broken down the traditional model of accelerator programmes and rebuilt it specifically for building, scaling and innovating in healthcare while putting patients first.

“With our first cohort of businesses on board, and the programme now open to corporate partners, we look forward to guiding their journey in tackling some of the world’s-biggest healthcare problems with technology.”

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