Skip to main content

News

By Aditi Pai | 01:45 pm | October 05, 2015
Atlanta, Georgia-based MedZed has raised $3.
By Aditi Pai | 11:30 am | October 05, 2015
Chicago-based PinpointCare has raised $11 million from private and existing investors for its web-based program, hosted in Microsoft’s Azure cloud, that helps doctors create, customize, and track care plans for patients.
By Aditi Pai | 11:10 am | October 05, 2015
UCSF's PRIDE Study The National Institutes of Health has awarded UCSF $9.
By Jonah Comstock | 09:11 am | October 05, 2015
Tactio Health Group, a Montreal-based company that builds smartphone-connected remote patient monitoring devices, will run a 25-person pilot study with the University of Michigan Health System, studying the effects of pharmacist-led home blood pressure monitoring and medication reminders on people with hypertension.
By Jonah Comstock | 01:22 pm | October 01, 2015
It can be a little hard to keep track of exactly what Palo Alto-based HealthTap does these days.
By Aditi Pai | 01:05 pm | October 01, 2015
Dallas, Texas-based hospital Children's Health has launched a new app, called My Asthma Pal, to help children track and manage their asthma, according to the Dallas Business Journal.
By Aditi Pai | 12:59 pm | October 01, 2015
Yale has launched a study for people who have or may develop cardiomyopathy, a disease of the heart muscle, on ResearchKit, Apple's open source platform that helps researchers build medical apps and recruit patients for clinical trials.
By Brian Dolan | 12:36 pm | October 01, 2015
Palo Alto-based consumer health startup Better, which counts the Mayo Clinic's venture arm and the Social+Capital Partnership as investors, is closing up shop at the end of the month, according to statements made by the company on its website and on Twitter.
By Jonah Comstock | 09:13 am | October 01, 2015
WebMD's Medscape team is working on a new clinical reference app called Medscape Consult that will include an option for doctors to "crowdsource" clinical advice from their colleagues.
By Jonah Comstock | 12:07 pm | September 30, 2015
A team of researchers at the University of Texas at Austin has developed a new manufacturing process for flexible electronics that could represent a major step forward for ultra-thin tattoo-like health sensors.