Event to “connect the docs” with St. Louis startups
While early-stage startup companies talk a lot about investment, the one thing every young company needs is a customer. Next month, more than 20 early-stage St. Louis medical and bio-tech companies will get the chance to court some potential customers from the St. Louis healthcare industry, when both groups meet at the Cortex center in midtown St. Louis. On the evening of November 3, “we’re inviting more than 200 physicians from the region to discover the newest companies impacting the next generation of healthcare,” says Carter Williams, CEO and Managing Partner at iSelect, a venture...
Read MoreEntrepreneur builds “Uber of Babysitting” for St. Louis
Those who haven’t grown up in St. Louis but hang their hats here professionally know it’s not easy being a St. Louisan. From learning some of our strange culinary habits (provel cheese?) to mastering the intricacies of our dialect (fark? warsh?), to setting aside an allegiance to your own hometown baseball team to immerse yourself in an ocean of Cardinal red each October, becoming a true St. Louisan can be a challenge. Here’s a challenge a native of St. Louis may not have considered. What is it like for a single, or couple, neither of whom has roots in St. Louis, to find a good local...
Read MoreSt. Louis startup building new epilepsy drug
Epilepsy, also known as seizure disorder, is one of the world’s most common and most serious neurological conditions, afflicting about 50 million people around the globe. It’s estimated that about 70 percent of the world’s epilepsy patients can control their seizures by using the two dozen or so anticonvulsant drugs that are on the market. As long as they take their daily pills, they’re essentially seizure-free. But some 30 percent of epilepsy patients are considered “refractory” to currently marketed medications. That is, those patients are unable to achieve adequate seizure control using...
Read MoreNew web show will put your idea to the test
Do you have a great idea you think might be a money maker, but you’re not sure where to turn to find out if your hunch is a good one? A St. Louis entrepreneur says he can provide you some direction, starting next month, via a new online video program called “Cash or Crash.” Entrepreneur Dr. Renato Cataldo has already founded one video-based company in St. Louis. His CrazyForEducation.com start-up collects instructional videos from teachers and distributes them to students and parents for a fee, with the teachers who create the videos sharing in the revenue. Hear founder Renato...
Read MoreIllinois county finds a fit in PFITR
Madison County, Illinois has turned to a St. Louis startup company to help guide the county’s future investment decisions. The southern Illinois county’s selection of PFITR (pronounced P-fitter) comes several months after County Treasurer Kurt Prenzler announced Madison County received a $340,000 settlement of an arbitration claim against an Arkansas securities firm that was charging excessive commissions on county investments made prior to Prenzler’s administration. The firm settled the 2011 claim without admitting liability. Prenzler says the selection of PFITR, a Software as a...
Read MoreHIPAA help from a St. Louis startup
As founder and CEO of a company that guides medical professionals through the complex and daunting world of HIPAA – the 1996 federal law that restricts access to individuals’ private medical information — Sarah Badahman knows she needs to express to her customers passion and enthusiasm for the subject matter. To wit: her LinkedIn profile reads, in part, “I have been accused of being a special kind of crazy since I love HIPAA and all things security related!” “Apparently, this is not a normal love,” she writes. Hear Sarah Badahman’s interview on KMOX Radio/St. Louis by clicking...
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