As healthcare pivots to value based service, Helix Health uses data analytics to reduce costs
August 6, 2019 | Rashi Shrivastava
Prevention is cheaper than cure — a sentiment forming the foundation of Helix Health, said Anurag Patel.
“The business of healthcare today is that if you’re sick, then you’re a customer of healthcare. If you’re healthy, then you’re not,” Patel said, describing a need for creating a business model that helps people stay healthy.
Helix Health aims to connect healthcare providers with preventive solutions for patients with chronic illnesses like diabetes, said Patel, co-founder and CEO.
A quotient of the problem also lies in opaque payment models used by healthcare companies, added Aaron Deacon, co-founder and president of Helix Health and managing director of KC Digital Drive.
“You’ve got the insurance companies or the federal government as intermediaries. There’s no transparency of pricing sort of throughout that chain,” he said. “It’s also hard for people to sort of make price choices as rational consumers, because there’s so much complexity in the system.”
Slowly but surely, the healthcare market is shifting from a “fee for service”-based system — where healthcare companies are paid more to do more — to a “value-based” system in which they are paid more to do better, he said.
“Doctor’s offices, which have been charged with keeping each patient healthy, are now being reimbursed and incentivized monetarily by how they keep their whole aggregate population healthy,” said Deacon.
Finding real-world solutions
Hoping to provide an opportunity of disruption in a traditionally robust and rigid space, Helix Health relies on artificial intelligence and data partnerships to create a data analytics platform for healthcare providers, Patel said.
“What we track is what happens in the real world,” said Patel. “We plug into this new environment by saying that we have the analytics or the tools that allow them to see which patients to focus on and how that would prevent downstream and expensive costs.”
The trajectory of treatment for each patient is different based on their socio-economic background, Patel explained.
“Even though there’s a single set of treatments for diabetes, for example, the application outside of the clinic may look different for different people,” said Patel.
Consequently, the firm collects both clinical and non-clinical patient data, said Deacon.
“We bring multiple sources of data together to get more nuanced picture of what’s happening and understand different pathways diabetic patients take from diagnosis through treatment, to a certain result,” he said.
From Project Helix to Helix Health
The idea for the Digital Sandbox KC-funded startup was originally floating in a different form.
“We’ve been helping the health tech community get together to work on how to commercialize research into application for health purposes. And at one point we realized that instead of trying to push people, we should just potentially do one,” said Patel.
In 2018, founders Patel and Deacon paired up with organizations like Code for Kansas City and the KC Digital Drive to enter into an open innovation challenge at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
“We ended up getting third place out of more than 60 companies nationally … getting $15,000 to do product development,” Deacon said.
Being able to deliver analyzed data on different platforms in a scalable manner has been a major pain point for Helix Health, said Deacon.
“Doctors are inundated with technology and for all of the sort of upside of having electronic medical records, doctors generally hate them. The question is how do we deliver information and insight in a way that is most usable for a customer?” he said.
The startup’s primary customers are “payers and providers” which includes healthcare institutions, insurance companies and employers who provide insurance for their employees.
Value-based service is an opportunity to build higher quality and efficiency, said Patel, noting key factors in the digital health evolution.
“I believe we need some innovation and disruption in the healthcare market, especially on how we work with preventing diseases instead of always being reactionary,” said Patel.
This story was produced through a collaboration between Missouri Business Alert and Startland News.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Three tips to landing in the Techstars KC accelerator
Techstars new local accelerator is on the lookout for ten tech companies to join the Kansas City accelerator’s inaugural class. In an effort to cull suitable applicants, Techstars KC managing director Lesa Mitchell recently shared some of the top traits the program is looking for in companies. “The Techstars team in Kansas City is…
Photo gallery: Pipeline pitches and the Innovators gala
Pipeline Entrepreneurs celebrated 10 years in style Thursday at the Midland Theater. Check out this photo gallery of the organization’s pitch contest and gala. For more: Here’s a feature story on the gala. Here’s a news story on the award winners. Here’s more background on the organization and its leader, Joni Cobb.
Glitter and gratitude: Pipeline celebrates a decade of family in style
Glitz and glam; bold and gold; audacious and, more than ever, gracious. Each January, powerhouse businesspeople from around the Midwest venture to Kansas City to see if Pipeline Entrepreneurs can once again top its enchanting evening of entrepreneurial energy, now known as the Innovators. Hosted at the Midland Theater, the gala is a veritable smorgasbord…
Pipeline recognizes the Innovator of The Year, announces 2017 class
St. Louis entrepreneur Michelle Faits was dubbed Pipeline Entrepreneurs’ Innovator of the Year at last night’s culminating event, The Innovators. Faits is the founder of Pro-Arc Diagnostics — a medical startup that is developing a next-generation laboratory test for patients at risk of Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy (PML) which is caused by the John Cunningham Virus.…
