The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Two tech bachelors team up to save maternity costs

- By Thomas Heath

I believe in being lucky. I also believe you make your luck. Entreprene­ur Juan Pablo Segura volunteere­d for several years at a summer camp for kids with neuromuscu­lar disease. He was sharing a beer after the fourth year with a friend from the camp who has muscular dystrophy. The buddy said something that changed Segura’s life. “He tells me how genetics and big data are going to transform health care,” recalled Segura, who worked in financial consulting for Deloitte at the time. Segura jumped on the idea. He partnered with a tech-minded Deloitte colleague, Anish Sebastian, to create Babyscript­s, a Washington D.C.-based start-up that seeks to revolution­ize pregnancy care for both doctor and patient. Babyscript­s makes a software app whose mission is to reduce the number of doctor visits during pregnancy - saving time so doctors can concentrat­e on their higher-risk patients. It is another ambitious entrant amonga generation of young, disruptive companies, like Uber and Airbnb, that are mobilizing technology against complex industries such as health care, transporta­tion and travel. “We are trying to make the patient journey more convenient,” Segura said. “We want to eliminate patients’ visits so doctors make more money.” They sell to doctors and health-care systems, but pregnant moms benefit because they can have their doctor “visits” automated from home. “Moms are working; they aren’t in the home. For many who already have kids, when they visit the doctor, they have to plan for child care, drive an hour through traffic, sit in a waiting room, pay for parking and take three hours out of their day for a 15-minute visit,” he said. “Even then, the majority of pregnant women are healthy and just go through all that and get a thumbs-up, highfive. It doesn’t make sense when they have so many other responsibi­lities.” Babyscript­s employs 25 people at its Washington headquarte­rs. That includes a sales team, software engineers and employees who train physicians on how to use its products. Segura said the company expects to gross more than mil$1 lion this year. He said he expects Babyscript­s to turn a profit in 2019. The company has raised $8 million to date from investors, including GE Ventures and $5 million last July from Ysios Capital, a Spanish firm that provides financing for health-care companies. Co-founders Segura and Sebastian are still substantia­l shareholde­rs. Segura, a graduate of the University of Notre Dame, is Babyscript­s’ president and “the vision guy.” Sebastian, who graduated from the Uni- versity of Maryland, is the chief executive and runs the technology side of the business. The business works something like this: The OBGYN, or baby doctor, enrolls patients into the Babyscript app in the first visit of pregnancy. Babyscript­s ships a kit to the patient from a North Carolina fulfillmen­t center that allows them to relay data such as blood pressure - a critical metric in pregnant women - to the doctor from the home. The company sells five products. The main product is designed to automate the pregnancy visits and reduce the number. There products include tests for blood sugar for women who develop a form of diabetes during pregnancy. There is also a post-pregnancy interactiv­e survey to screen moms for post-pregnancy problems such as depression. Babyscript­s can alert the physician so he or she can act if there is a problem. Babyscript­s can track whether women know how to breast-feed, have enough food in the house and enjoy a stable living situation. There is a lot of competitio­n in this space. Segura said pregnancy apps are among the most downloaded in health care. Most apps are geared toward patients, but Babyscript­s sells to doctors, specifical­ly those who specialize in pregnancy and childbirth. “That makes us unique,” Segura said. “Typically, there is a serious return on the investment. Most OBGYNs use a similar, one-size-fits-all playbook that calls for about 14 visits for each pregnant patient. They are paid a flat fee of around $3,500 for a ninemonth pregnancy. But the idea here is to save the physician’s time spent on lowrisk patients. “We automate the prenatal care so patients can go in eight or nine times instead of 14 times, while still capturing necessary data,” Segura said. “That frees up the doctor. They are getting the same amount of money but have more time for highrisk patients.” The company charges hos- pitals a monthly fee based on each patient served. The fees are tied to how many patients participat­e in the Babyscript­s program. The start-up’s clients are 15 health systems across 13 states, including MedStar Health, George Washington University Hospital and Cone Health, a notfor-profit network in North Carolina. The two bachelors (Sebastian is marrying soon) knew nothing about pregnancy when they started researchin­g big data and health care back in 2011. “We are known as the bachelors who started a pregnancy remote monitoring company,” Segura said. “We had gone to a couple of conference­s where everyone was talking about moving costs out of hospitals and better managing costs in the home,” Segura said. “We stumbled on the idea that the internet of things is the conduit, the vehicle, that will allow a transforma­tion in the health-care system to actually occur.” They left Deloitte in 2013 and spent more than a year on research, developing a business plan, and talking to physicians and hospitals. They made a pitch video for investors. They attended conference­s to learn more about the intersecti­on of big data and health. “We used friends and family to get connected,” Segura said. They finally got a $900,000 investment from an angel investor . The money was used to build the initial Babyscript­s product and work with a group of doctors from George Washington Hospital. By the end of 2014, they were gaining credibilit­y and enlisted the chairman of OBGYN at Sibley Hospital to join the Babyscript­s team. The $900,000 grew to $3 million from outside investors over the next two years. Their credibilit­y grew. President Barack Obama nominated Sebastian, who studied informatio­n systems at the University of Maryland, in 2015 as a White House Champion of Change for his Babyscript­s research.

 ?? JAHI CHIKWENDIU / WASHINGTON POST ?? Anish Sebastian (left) and Juan Pablo Segura created the start-up Babyscript­s, which produces software to reduce the number of doctor’s office visits made by pregnant women.
JAHI CHIKWENDIU / WASHINGTON POST Anish Sebastian (left) and Juan Pablo Segura created the start-up Babyscript­s, which produces software to reduce the number of doctor’s office visits made by pregnant women.

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