Play-It Health lands in top-ranked digital health accelerator
May 12, 2015 | Abby Tillman
As with many successful startups, the idea for Play-It Health was born out of personal experience with an unsolved industry need.
Kim Gandy, a former clinician and now the founder and CEO of Play-It Health, recognized that patients were having trouble engaging and adhering to their medical regimen. In the worst cases, this led to death. So, Gandy switched careers, founded a company and dedicated three years to building a digital healthcare application that helps patients accurately stay on track with their medical plan.
“I’ve been working on versions of this effort for quite some time,” Gandy said. “The thing that’s been constant has been the vision and the need. For me, that really hasn’t changed. That’s the part that’s unified the whole effort and kept it going in spite of the many obstacles we’ve had to overcome.”
And overcome they have. Play-It Health recently announced their acceptance into Iron Yard, one of the top-ranked digital health accelerators in the country. Gandy and a rotating set of team members will move to South Carolina to participate in the three-month program, receiving $20,000 funding, office space, mentorships, development support and a chance to pitch at the Southeast VC Forum and Health 2.0 conference this fall in Silicon Valley.
Gandy said being accepted into the program was validation for her company, noting that their acceptance into the accelerator came mostly from their recognition on a national level.
For Gandy and Play-It Health, access to a growing network of mentors and venture capitalists are two of the major benefits of being accepted into the program.
“Iron Yard allows us direct access into a different group of mentors that we’re looking forward to very much,” she said. “We will have direct access to different sources of capital, too. It’s going to bring a lot more eyes onto us than we’ve previously seen.”
The program begins May 18 with a final demo day Oct. 4 to Oct. 7 in Silicon Valley. After the program, Gandy anticipates increased opportunities for her company, including a significant hiring effort in the fall and more interest from investors.
Play-It Health currently has pilot programs with Duke University, Standford Univeresity, Truman Medical Centers and several other organizations. To learn more on Play-It Health’s product — which is available on iOS devices — visit their website.
Featured Business

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
First domino falls as University of Kentucky athletic department launches its own LLC
Editor’s note: The perspectives expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Parker Graham is co-founder of Vestible, an Overland Park-based investment platform that gives fans ownership in the career trajectories of their favorite players. The University of Kentucky’s athletic department is officially becoming its own LLC. Anyone in athletics needs to understand the implications…
BoysGrow cultivates young leaders in South Kansas City through farming, purpose, entrepreneurship
Editor’s note: The following story was written and first published by the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City, Missouri (EDCKC). Click here to read the original story. At the heart of South Kansas City’s farmland, a quiet transformation is happening. For more than a decade, BoysGrow has been shaping not just crops — but futures. Founded in…
Start the ignition: These Operation Breakthrough students just designed MADE MOBB’s latest drop
Vu Radley wants students at Operation Breakthrough’s Ignition Lab to have opportunities he wishes he would have been offered in high school, shared the co-owner of Crossroads-based streetwear brand MADE MOBB. His team spent the past nine months working with a handful of teens at the Ignition Lab — Josiah Bryant, Suleyman Dia, Jeremiyah Bradley,…
It’s going DAO: Why an NFT-fueled blockchain org is launching in KC alongside Global Pizza Day
A pizza party in a Midtown eatery covered in art is expected to mark the launch of a Nouns DAO chapter in Kansas City — a group endeavoring to fund local creativity, support the public good and expand access to decentralized cultural funding. But there’s more at stake than just getting a piece of the…
