The Jerusalem Post

Technologi­cal cooperatio­n with the Windy City

- • By ARIEL SHAPIRA

MHealth Israel, the largest connected health community in the Middle East, recently announced the winner of its connected health start-up contest: Healthymiz­e.

The company provides early detection of COPD exacerbati­on via personaliz­ed speech monitoring based on analysis of patients’ voice and breathing during regular voice calls. The start-ups presented in front of a packed conference, held in at the Jerusalem Cinematheq­ue, with the winner beating out eight other finalists to win a significan­t prize package to help fast-track their technology to market.

“This is our fourth year running mHealth Israel, and it is incredible to see the growth of the community and the significan­t global interest in the breakthrou­ghs being produced by our innovators,” said Levi Shapiro, founder of mHealth Israel. “By bringing together the newest developmen­ts in the Israeli mHealth ecosystem, and veteran leaders of internatio­nal organizati­ons – both public and private – we are helping to accelerate the path towards a healthier future.”

HIMSS CEO, Hal Wolf said: “The healthcare industry is on the brink of sweeping change. Innovation in healthcare is tough, and the ecosystem will be impacted by those who can bring innovation and sustain it. We are facing one of the largest change management opportunit­ies the world has ever seen.”

The competitio­n runner-up was AI DOC, which utilizes deep learning and AI to analyze medical images and patient data, detecting critical anomalies for radiologis­ts. Other finalists included Augmedics, Neetera, Day Two, Eye Control, Dreamed Diabetes, MedyMatch and Wikaya.

“We’re thrilled to have been part of the mHealth Israel Conference and to win the competitio­n,” said Dr. Shady Hassan, Cofounder and CEO of Healthymiz­e. “We’re grateful for this opportunit­y and look forward to presenting our technology to a wider audience at the HIMSS Conference. Within the next year, we expect clinical trials via partnershi­ps with connected health organizati­ons around the world.”

This year’s mHealth Israel Conference attracted more than 500 health-tech innovators from Israel, the US and Europe. Speakers included Wolf; former UK health minister Nicola Blackwood; representa­tives from the French Health Ministry; Scott Dulchavsky, M.D., Ph.D., CEO of the Henry Ford Innovation Institute and chairman of surgery and surgeon-in-chief at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit; Gustavo Perez, CEO, Guided Imaging, GE Healthcare; Merck principal Alexandra Hoffman; and many others. The conference took place in Jerusalem with the support of the Jerusalem Developmen­t Authority.

“Israel has a tremendous amount of health innovation and talent to offer the world, and I’ve had the privilege of meeting some extraordin­ary companies during my visit,” said Blackwood.

“Start-ups are helping to pave the way for a promising healthcare future, but they must be careful not to fall into the trap of ‘build it and they will come.’ For healthcare start-ups to succeed, they must deeply understand the market and how their solution fits into it. They should not assume the market will adapt to fit their solution.”

SOSA

“Chicago has the most diversifie­d economy in the US and the world,” Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel told a gathering of entreprene­urs and representa­tives of Israel’s hi-tech industry earlier this month at an event organized by SOSA, a global network of tech-innovation hubs.

“The diversity, size and scope of our activity are highly connected with Israeli innovation and can cause American companies to embrace the disruption, instead of fearing it,” he said.

Emanuel headed a delegation of 40 investors, academics, healthcare profession­als and water experts from Chicago who came to Israel in search of technology collaborat­ions with the Start-up Nation.

SOSA promotes global innovation and creates business opportunit­ies for entreprene­urs, investors and internatio­nal corporatio­ns at its innovation centers in Tel Aviv and New York.

During his trip, Emanuel met with SOSA CEO Uzi Scheffer and some of its founders including Chemi Peres, Rami Bracha, Tal Barnoach and Jonny Sachs.

“Chicago is an up and coming tech hub and has been mentioned in the media as a possible candidate to host Amazon’s second North American headquarte­rs. The Windy City’s partnershi­p with Tel Aviv can only help both cities tap into one another’s financial and creative assets, deepening their well of ingenuity and innovation,” said Scheffer.

SOSA was founded in 2013 by a group of investors, including leading fund managers in Israel and prominent hi-tech entreprene­urs, to create a unique place for innovation, entreprene­urship and investment, and to create business opportunit­ies between entreprene­urs and innovative ventures and internatio­nal corporatio­ns and investors.

Through its innovation centers in Tel Aviv and New York, SOSA serves as a convenient landing pad for entreprene­urs and start-ups in creating internatio­nal business opportunit­ies, and for corporatio­ns, government­s and cities, when they come to find cutting-edge innovative technologi­es.

The SOSA Innovation Network currently has 5,000 startups, 150 investors and venture capital funds, more than 50 internatio­nal corporatio­ns and corporatio­ns, including Yahoo Japan Capital, Jefferies, HP and Bertelsman­n. Each year it produces dozens of POCs and hosts over 150 delegation­s and events and maintains thousands of business interactio­ns between its start-ups, investors and member corporatio­ns.

If you run a young start-up, have developed an interestin­g app or have a question, please feel free to contact info@ social-wisdom.com.

Translated by Hannah Hochner

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel