At Aspen Ideas: Health, innovators, policy makers, physicians, researchers, investors and thought leaders came together from across the globe with one objective in mind: exploring bold approaches for the future of health. We spent three days discussing how to deliver care differently, better, and more comprehensively. So what needs to happen to bring these discussions to life, and actually impact the delivery of care?
Today, home is more than a home. It’s our doctor’s office, our diagnostics lab, our long-term care center.
In our latest report, we surveyed 1,000+ adults between the ages of 60-79 to better understand what this population might want, need and desire at the intersection of health and home, and the technologies they choose to adopt. In this recorded webinar, LINUS President Kristin Apple and CEO Hamid Ghanadan discuss insights and data from our study and the foundation of how to evolve for the future of health at home.
Year after year, health continues to dominate the conversations happening around every corner. Even at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show, an annual show that sets the tone of innovation, health tech reigned the show, from wellness devices to at-home solutions.
With an eye on emergent companies that are shifting from traditional B2B or HCP-only models to direct to consumer (DTC) models, and our deep rooted in-category experience, we’ve identified five forces that we believe will shape the conversations around life science, health, and wellness in 2022.
Innovation in healthcare has moved faster in the past 10 weeks than it has in the last 5 years. During a time consumers needed it most, the digital health, life sciences, and care delivery industries rallied to answer this call for innovation and progress. We talked with leaders across these industries to learn how they pivoted during a pandemic.
Health is at the epicenter of conversations happening in 2020 and next year. Our strategists at LINUS have identified trends that could shape these conversations and shape our future.
Innovation in healthcare has moved faster in the past 10 weeks than it has in the last 5 years. During a time consumers needed it most, the digital health, life sciences, and care delivery industries rallied to answer this call for innovation and progress. We talked with leaders across these industries to learn how they pivoted during a pandemic.
There’s no doubt that coronavirus continues to impact our healthcare systems. And one system that has been disrupted like never before is women’s health. Yet despite these setbacks, femtech companies are coming together to better support women’s health. Trends like more physicians adopting at-home services and solutions, electronic medical records integration, over-the-counter diagnostics, and access to data means women can stay at home, without risking their health for a visit. This is the future of women’s health.
Because health is so important to us, we've decided to not only cover the costs of our employees' registrations for charity races or events, but also the costs of any of our active clients. LINUS will sponsor any current clients who are running, biking or participating in any charitable health events in 2020.
This year’s HLTH 2019 conference was abuzz with the exciting frontiers of healthcare. Yet there was a deafening silence in three key areas that we think could have an even bigger impact on the future of health if we add them into the folds of our conversations.