Cape Breton Post

Tech startup to bring standardiz­ed health info to masses

- ROSALIND STEFANAC

Standardiz­ing the world’s health knowledge so that everyone can get the best care possible seems like a lofty mission for one company, but if any Canadian health-tech startup can make it happen, Think Research Corp. may be the safest bet.

Already backed by private investors for some $50 million, the Toronto-based company went public this past December as pandemic-inspired interest in digital health solutions continues to soar.

“2020 was a tipping point … and this became a bit of a moment for us to shine,” said chief executive Sachin Aggarwal, who admits that joining the Toronto Stock Exchange wasn’t on the radar PRECOVID-19. “While we were growing at a good pace, there’s nothing quite like being in the public markets to be able to raise capital and issue stocks for the purpose of acquisitio­ns.”

The boom in interest and funding in health innovation shouldn’t be surprising with virtual health care finally taking off, largely due to the pandemic.

Total funding in the sector hit US$9.2 billion in the first half of 2020, up nearly 19 per cent from the same period a year earlier, according to Startup Health’s 2020 Midyear Funding Report. The report also showed Toronto is one of the top 10 most-funded cities for health innovation outside the United States, and second only to London in terms of the number of deals made.

But though digital health is coming on strong now, Think Research was launched in 2006 as one of the first Canadian startups in the space. It now offers a number of software tools and services for clinicians, including a virtual care platform, applicatio­ns for providing electronic referrals, digital support tools geared to senior care and digitized order sets based on the latest evidence-based, clinical knowledge.

Having up-to-date clinical content is becoming a crucial ask among health-care institutio­ns because treatment protocols around COVID-19 are constantly changing.

Before going public, Think Research was already providing a suite of digital health solutions to help clinicians standardiz­e processes in more than 2,200 health-care facilities in North America and the European Union — and improving care for millions of patients each year in the process.

Now, Think Research is “hyper focused” on having several clinical service delivery organizati­ons in its network using every bit of the company’s software from end to end.

The goal, Aggarwal said, is to “prove how high-quality standardiz­ed care can be used to improve outcomes for patients, and also how it delivers better financial metrics for shareholde­rs.”

To that end, Think Research acquired Torontobas­ed Healthcare Plus clinics last year, which will be using its Virtualcar­e platform to serve an existing base of 100,000 patients, plus grow remote care services across the country.

Another more recent acquisitio­n is Clinic 360, a cosmetic and elective surgery clinic in Toronto, with more than a dozen specialist­s and surgeons.

“Given the fact that elective surgeries were basically shut down during COVID and will be moving to the private sector, this will be a great place for us to showcase our stuff,” Aggarwal said, hinting at more acquisitio­ns coming in 2021.

Think Research also partnered with the Ontario Psychologi­cal Associatio­n (OPA) to provide its virtual platform to members across the province, thereby assisting in the delivery of mental health treatment during the start of the pandemic last March.

Past OPA president and neuropsych­ologist Dr. Sylvain Roy, who helped facilitate the software integratio­n, said using the platform in their clinical practices has helped traditiona­l tech-averse providers change their mindset around virtual care.

 ?? PETER J. THOMPSON • POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Think Research CEO Sachin Aggarwal at the company’s offices in Toronto.
PETER J. THOMPSON • POSTMEDIA NEWS Think Research CEO Sachin Aggarwal at the company’s offices in Toronto.

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