News
Skulpt, which has developed a smartphone-connected device that measures a user's body fat percentage and muscle quality, raised $4.
Considering recent events, big name consumer brands are more likely than ever to move into regulated medical devices.
By Jessica Davis, Associate Editor, Healthcare IT News
As they look to population health management, nearly two-thirds of hospitals and healthcare systems have adopted remote patient monitoring and analytics into their care processes, but there's a long journey ahead before many get their strategies down.
Fitbit Surge
Fitbit has added a new functionality to its Fitbit Charge HR and Fitbit Surge trackers that will enable the device to readily distinguish between different kinds of movement, and has also upgraded the heart rate sensors in the trackers.
PatientPop, which offers a marketing service that doctors can use to grow their practice, raised $10 million from Toba Capital.
Philips has launched its smartphone- and tablet-connected ultrasound system for physicians, called Lumify, in the United States, just a few weeks after it was cleared by the FDA for prescription use.
Michael Millenson
There appears to be a broad consensus that patient-centeredness is important to the future of healthcare, according to a new report from the Urban Institute.
San Francisco-based Circle Medical, which has developed a doctor house call app, raised $2.
HealthCrowd has raised $2.
With every new innovator in digital health, it seems like there's a temptation to crown an "Uber for Health" that will disrupt the industry in a radical consumer-facing way.