Kansas startup founder, Pipeline fellow among finalists in NXTSTAGE healthtech competition
July 26, 2021 | Startland News Staff
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation.
WICHITA — A new pilot competition showcasing solutions from healthtech startups is expected to feature one of Kansas’ top emerging founders and a current Pipeline fellow.
Miguel Johns, founder and CEO of Wichita-based KingFit, is set to compete next month against 11 other finalists with his DiabetesCare platform in the inaugural NXTSTAGE Community Health and Vibrancy Pilot Competition.
“This group of startups is poised to change communities for the better, and we are delighted they are competing to implement their innovations in Kansas,” said Mary Beth Jarvis, NXTUS executive director. “Thanks to our future-minded partners, Kansas can be a proving ground for technologies that show great promise to improve our population health and unlock growth potential in rural and urban areas.
“This idea is central to NXTSTAGE: We believe the Air Capital of the World can become the Pilot Capital of the World, and we want to show innovators that their businesses can make a difference and grow here.”
NXTSTAGE seeks to boost the growth of young tech companies and accelerate the pace of innovation in the region, according to its organizers.
Competition winners are expected to be announced Aug. 12 during an innovation showcase at Botanica, the Wichita Gardens. Click here to register for the in-person event.
The applicant pool for competition was diverse, Jarvis said, noting 82 percent had minority and/or female founders. Of the finalists, which hail from 10 states plus Montreal, Canada, 83 percent have ethnic minority or female founders, she said.
“We are very impressed with the variety of applicants who are ready and willing to utilize their technology to help make Kansas a healthier state to live, work and play,” said Virginia Barnes, Blue Health Initiatives director at Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas, the presenting sponsor of the competition. “This technology is poised to help us improve the social determinants of health in our state, giving Kansans more support systems and better access to care.”
Johns’ DiabetesCare, for example, uses social media and technology to engage people with diabetes and enroll them in programs that improve health outcomes.
Click here to learn more about the Wichita founder, a former participant in the Pitch Perfect program at the Enterprise Center in Johnson County and who was announced as a 2021 Pipeline Entrepreneurs fellow in February.
Along with funding from Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas, NXTSTAGE is supported by the Talent Ecosystem Fund at the Wichita Community Foundation, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and NetWork Kansas.
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn
Featured Business

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Raaxo takes shape after pivot from Aphrodite Bra Co’s body scan concept
Despite its use of body-mapping technology, Aphrodite Bra Company wasn’t the right fit for customers’ needs, said Carlanda McKinney, founder of the newly rebooted custom intimates company Raaxo. “Aphrodite had been stuck in the starting-up space,” she said. “We’d never really gotten enough sales or enough traction to say, ‘We’re launched,’ or, ‘We’re in business.’…
KC mom’s humble entrepreneurial journey draws on healing power of creativity
Huddled in her parents’ basement, between the cribs of her crying twin babies, Keliah Smith began to draw. She was unemployed and feeling emotionally drained. The relationship with her children’s father had soured. Her escape: the stylus and smartphone in her hands. The Kansas City mother drew what she didn’t see in the mirror, she…
Harvard University recognizes KCMO digital inclusion map
Kansas City’s geographic work to illustrate the area’s digital divide earned high praise from a prestigious university. Harvard University recently highlighted the City of Kansas City, Missouri’s Digital Inclusion map, a tool that — at a block-by-block scale — detail residents’ access to internet connectivity overlaid with poverty levels. “This visualization was chosen as Harvard’s…



