Singapore-based incubator transforms startups into global brands
One of the biggest medtech, healthtech and biotech accelerators in Singapore is MedTech Actuator, which was founded in 2018 by a group of entrepreneurs and health policy experts to help promising startups rise quickly to global prominence.
Dr Buzz Palmer, its Co-Founder and Chief Executive, says the MedTech Actuator has become one of the Asia-Pacific region’s premier medtech commercialisation initiatives, developing innovation ecosystems with support from more than a hundred global partners.
He sees the medtech industry growing even more in a post-pandemic era.
“The MedTech Actuator, through its many global programmes and initiatives, has supported more than 200 healthtech startups that have collectively raised over $1 billion in capital and created more than 900 jobs,” he says.
Two Singapore-based startups under the accelerator programme are Rebee Health and Anto Medcare.
Rebee Health is a digital health platform by health tech platform XCLR8 Technologies. It helps people suffering from musculoskeletal conditions or chronic pain, as well as those recovering from post-operative surgery.
It works through physical rehabilitation sessions with limited to no supervision at the hospital or in a user’s home. The system is designed to transform the way physical rehabilitation is conducted for both patients and therapists.
It is said to reduce the cost of physiotherapy and the number of in-person visits to the clinic or hospital by over 50 per cent, saving thousands of dollars.
The company’s flagship product is the Rebee 2.0, which contains wearable sensors for tracking body movements to ensure the user is doing rehabilitation exercises correctly.
Its accompanying app features a humanoid model that mirrors the patient in real time, guiding him or her safely through the rehabilitation movements using audio and visual cues.
Another element is the “therapist portal” that lets physiotherapists or clinicians access advanced data insights in the form of easy-to-read graphs and charts, in order to make informed decisions about the user’s progress remotely.
The company is helmed by Chief Executive Lincoln Dacy, 42, and Chief Operations Officer Jada Seet, 39, who met at Singapore Management University while studying for their master’s in innovation science.
The company has six full-time engineers and clinical trainers in Singapore, as well as three full-time staff members in India.
“Over the last two years, we have invested significantly in research and development and piloting Rebee across Singapore’s leading public hospitals and community care organisations,” says Mr Dacy.
“We have worked with senior citizens suffering from various conditions such as muscle deconditioning, frozen shoulders, knee osteoarthritis and neurological rehabilitation.”
Mr Dacy says Rebee Health is collaborating with the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*Star) to develop a wearable sensor that will improve Rebee Health’s appearance and features, so the platform can also be launched in the wellness sector.
“The wearable sensor, which is able to track body movements, is worn like a smart watch and simply placed on the injured limb,” he says.
At Singapore-based digital startup Anto Medcare, its Founder Edison Bellarmin developed a remote monitoring tool called the Anto Smart Cushion that helps prevent pressure injuries and falls for people in wheelchairs.
Pressure injuries are serious skin wounds that occur after prolonged periods of sitting.
Dr Edison, 40, founded the company in 2020, and is also Anto Medcare’s Chief Executive. Dr Thomas Ooi, 44, joined as Head of Operations in the same year.
The product, which will be launched in a few months, is designed for both community care as well as home use.
Dr Edison says it targets issues related to wheelchair use – such as wounds, pain, falls and wrong posture – through a personalised smart sensor cushion with a built-in algorithm that detects poor sitting posture.
It works with a mobile app that alerts users, family members and caregivers to potential pressure injury risks.
Dr Edison and Dr Ooi are working on a new version of the cushion which will have features such as automated repositioning with proprietary technologies.
Dr Edison says: “Currently, wheelchair users need a helper or caregiver to help reposition them at frequent intervals as well as monitor them.
“Our new iteration will help reduce reliance on manpower, as well as rising medical costs for the wheelchair user. We will be rolling out the product with proprietary materials and patent-pending technologies to improve the quality of life of wheelchair users.”
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