KU Health System pilots KC health startup in rural Kansas

April 4, 2017  |  Meghan LeVota

Jeff Dunn, co-founder of Redivus Health; 2016 at the Sprint Accelerator

Kansas City-based software startup Redivus Health landed a partnership with the University of Kansas Health system, which will put its technology in the hands of many rural Kansans.

Launched in 2012, Redivus Health was founded by a group of physicians wanting to create better solutions for critical care situations. In 2015, the firm created a mobile app that reduces medical error in cases of cardiac arrest, stroke and sepsis. The app offers standardized, step-by-step protocols for care.

The nationally recognized University of Kansas Health System — which serves more than 37,000 patients annually and has a steady commitment to serving rural Kansans in particular — will employ Redivus Health’s technology to serve select rural Kansas hospitals. The hospitals are amongst the 40 rural Kansas hospitals served by the system’s Kansas Heart and Stroke Collaborative program.

Executives at the University of Kansas Health System say that Redivus Health fits with its vision is to bring systematic change to rural health systems and reduce costs.

“For rural hospitals that see fewer strokes, we expect this tool to provide both education and time-sensitive guidance to follow the stroke treatment steps,” said Marilyn Rymer neurologist at the University of Kansas Health System in a release. “When every minute counts for the stroke patients, we hope to improve the confidence in making critical decisions.”

Redivus Health co-founder Jeff Dunn said that time management is critical in cases of cardiac arrest, stroke and sepsis. He said that the mobile solution was designed knowing that every second counts.

“As doctors, we witnessed and experienced the daily challenges with adhering to evidence-based medicine, and we developed this solution to provide colleagues with a simple, intuitive way to follow standards and reduce error at the point of care,” Dunn said in a release. “As entrepreneurs, we are thrilled to work with a nationally recognized academic health system like the University of Kansas Health System to fine-tune our product and collect valuable feedback from the medical professionals using it.”

Redivus Health has been tested in the field and has proven to reduce medical error. In 2016, the firm was selected for the City of Kansas City’s Innovation Partnership Program, granting Dunn the opportunity to ride along with city dispatchers and pilot their app.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2017 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        How a toy car can recapture a moment (and put a little cash in this student’s pocket)

        By Tommy Felts | March 14, 2025

        Collecting toys is in Andrew Bates’ blood, the UMKC senior said — and now it’s in his wallet. A supply chain management student at the university, Bates was exposed to the hunt for nostalgia early, he said; his father was snagging Hot Wheels for him before Bates was born. “I was (slow) to embrace it,” the…

        Support without limits: Doctor duo flexes scrub design that’s a dream for women, mothers-to-be

        By Tommy Felts | March 14, 2025

        A pair of Kansas City doctors diagnosed a chronic need in maternity and versatility care for women — turning to entrepreneurship to prescribe “bump to pump” comfort and flexibility through a new line of scrubs. “Being physicians, we want to continue to help people,” said Dr. Christine Khong, who co-founded Vervee Scrubs alongside Dr. Melanie…

        Startup Weekend’s challenge: Build Missouri’s next billion-dollar idea (in three days)

        By Tommy Felts | March 14, 2025

        COLUMBIA, Missouri — Budding entrepreneurs are gathering next month for a three-day business pitch event that could earn them $45,000 in prizes plus a $150,000 investment opportunity for the winning company with billion-dollar potential, organizers said. Missouri Startup Weekend returns April 11-13 at EquipmentShare’s newly opened Technology & Development Center in Columbia. It’s a unique…

        Lawmaker asks SBA to relocate offices from KC to Columbia, citing sanctuary-like policies for immigrants

        By Tommy Felts | March 13, 2025

        A Kansas City-area congressman wants the U.S. Small Business Administration to move its offices from downtown Kansas City to central Missouri, amid President Trump’s nationwide crackdown on undocumented immigrants and a broad restructuring of how the federal government works. U.S. Rep. Mark Alford, R-Missouri, on Tuesday sent a letter to SBA Administrator Kelly Loeffler, asking…