Father turns grief over son’s loss into healthtech solution for speedier medical records transfers
June 6, 2019 | John Jared Hawks
Chris Jones’ quietly sunny disposition belies the hard knocks peppered throughout his past. Then again, the full-time consultant, masters candidate, and now startup founder sees all past experience as a catalyst for growth, he said.
“Everything you’ve been through in life prepares you for this moment, now,” said Jones, founder of MatchRite Care. “So you pull from that — the good the bad and the ugly — you learn how to pull from it all.”
MatchRite Care is one of five companies selected to present their software this weekend at DevDays US 2019, the largest Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR — pronounced “fire”) event in the world. MatchRite aims to solve a complex problem decades in the making: how to quickly and effectively transfer patient medical records between service providers.
“Many patients are forced to rely on their provider to send their medical records to them in a timely manner,” Jones said. “It is even more cumbersome to have your records moved or shared with another provider. According to a recent Black Book survey, 41 percent of surveyed health administrators face challenges when attempting to exchange electronic health records [EHR] between providers — specifically, providers operating on different EHR platforms.”
A fateful medical delay
On many levels, the self-described “adopted native” of Kansas City is intimately familiar with the problem.
In June 2008, Jones’ 5-year-old son, Christopher “CJ” Jones Jr., was diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor. The news led Jones to search for clinical trials, cutting-edge therapy, and any other option to heal his child. Near the end of CJ’s one-year prognosis, a clerical delay common to the current medical records system caused a missed clinical trial opportunity for Jones’ son.
“There is no proof that the trial would have helped, but it could have given CJ a chance at life as he later transitioned in May of 2009,” Jones said.
The grieving father became a healthcare information technology director, where he witnessed firsthand the cumbersome nature of utilizing existing EHR systems, which still hearken back to the days of government-mandated medical record digitalizations.
“Everybody started to develop their own electronic medical records systems, with no standards to it,” Jones explained. “You can’t really backtrack and get rid of all of those systems, you can only try to create interoperability between them.”
Current antidotes to the problem revolve around regional Health information exchanges (HIEs). After getting caught up in a round of layoffs, Jones found himself with time to gain perspective on why the current industry standards are ineffective.
“Every system goes into this one bucket, the HIE,” Jones said. “But there is no organization, and the patient is not going to know how to go dish their information out.”
Just getting started
With the problematic Health information exchanges in mind, Jones imagined a patient-centric, easy-access medical records system. Over the course of 11 months, this vision morphed from spare hours tinkering to passion project to a full-blown startup, branded MatchRite Care. Jones secured the organization’s patent in April and has since been met with enthusiasm from investors and health-care providers, already numbering several doctors among his investors.
Click here for MatchRite Care updates.
Jones said his mindset — and life experience — are making investors take notice.
“Investors, they want to know that you are true to your product and you are going to see your product out,” Jones said. “Because my focus has always been on my son and what happened to him and trying to fix it, I have never strayed away from my ultimate purpose, which is to put medical records in the patient’s hands.”
For now, Jones is prepping his DevDays talk and working toward his masters degree in software development.
“Not really [to say I have a] degree, but more to understand what’s going on in technology today,” Jones said. “I’m trying to be in a constant state of learning.
“I know I’m not finished yet – I’m actually just getting started,” he said.

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Truth, not Troost: Ruby Jean’s founder wants East Side corridor renamed over slavery ties
Despite its widely-known street name, “Troost Avenue” does not accurately represent the small businesses, nonprofits and families along the increasingly dense Kansas City corridor, said Chris Goode. “So many beautiful efforts take place on Troost — from The Combine to Operation Breakthrough or Urban Cafe and Rockhurst University… We are all collectively pushing for community,…
New focus will offer jobs to formerly incarcerated people on the path to second chance entrepreneurship, says nonprofit
Kansas City-based Determination, Incorporated is refocusing its mission with a new social enterprise business that will directly place formerly incarcerated individuals into employment soon after they return home. Strong Start Make Readies is expected to provide jobs to people exiting incarceration as members of make ready crews at Kansas City area apartment complexes, single-family rental…
J. Rieger spices up its strategy with KC culinary star; new tastes already hitting destination distillery’s menu
Deep fried and doubling down, the minds behind J. Rieger and Co. are distilling a new era that’s expected to make the local tourist destination one of Kansas City’s best places to work — and to grab one of its most legendary spicy chicken sandwiches. “If you didn’t already know, you quickly come in here and…



