Pilot competition taps drugless mental health solution for latest tech-infused cohort

August 6, 2025  |  Startland News Staff

Sarah Hill, Healium, speaks to a crowd gathered for Startland News' Innovation Exchange in September 2024; photo by Tommy Felts, Startland News

A Kansas City-connected startup that helps users see their feelings with its drugless biofeedback/neurofeedback technologies is among 10 companies selected for the latest pilot cohort from NXTUS in Wichita.

Finalists for the 2025 NXTSTAGE Community Health & Vibrancy Pilot Competition were announced Wednesday, including Columbia, Missouri-based Healium, which offers tech-driven mental wellness products that quickly reduce anxiety or improves mood in as little as four minutes.

RELATED: Healium partners with VFW to expand mental wellness tools for veterans

“We were attracted to NXTUS as it is trying to connect entrepreneurs with meaningful relationships,” said Sarah Hill, founder and CEO of Healium, a past Kansas City Startup to Watch embedded in ecosystems across Missouri. “We’ve attended some of its programs before and found them valuable.”

Healium and its fellow finalists were selected by NXTUS and leading community health and economic development organizations across Kansas, according to the Wichita-based program. These pilot partners will now work to design and select innovation projects they see as most promising for their communities.

The companies emerged as finalists from a competitor pool of 143 startups from 27 states and 15 countries.

2025 partners

Veteran NXTSTAGE Community Health & Vibrancy Pilot Competition program partners include Thrive Allen County, Hodgeman County Economic Development, LiveWell Northwest Kansas, Russell Regional Hospital, and JenRus Freelance Marketing (representing Republic County).

New pilot partners include Kansas Health Foundation, NMC Health, the Kansas Office of Rural Prosperity, CloudCorp Economic Development, and Coffey County Economic Development.

“They will travel here in October to present their technology tools to nine program partners and other innovation-hungry organizations focused on improving the health of Kansans and removing barriers to community growth,” NXTUS said in a press release.

Partners are expected to announce pilot projects during an Innovation Showcase, set for Oct. 9 at Equity Bank Park in Wichita. The event is open to community health and growth advocates from across the state.

In addition to Healium, finalists include:

Cairn Health, Wichita — Cairn Health helps uninsured, low-income Kansans access vital prescriptions through a mail-order charitable pharmacy for a small, affordable dispensing fee.

 

Greens Health, Houston — Greens Health helps Medicare seniors and caregivers manage blood sugar and pressure, medications, and meals with culturally tailored, convenient, holistic support

 

 • GrownBy, Cooperstown, New York — GrownBy is the farmer-owned marketplace for local food.

 

Kind-Ed, Chicago — KindEd is a social media and AI literacy provider. We use a behavior-focused approach to support healthy digital habits and youth wellness.

 

Kwema, St. Louis — The Kwema Smart Badge Reel contains a hidden duress button that empowers community healthcare workers to discreetly call for help during workplace violence incidents.

 

PearSuite, Tulsa — Pear Suite empowers community health workers (CHWs) and community-based organizations (CBOs) through an AI-powered care navigation platform, a national provider network, and comprehensive managed services.

 

Polco, Madison, Wisconsin — Polco helps local leaders understand community needs, design programs to address them, and secure funding with AI-powered grant management.

 

We the Village, New York City — We The Village empowers families to better recover from addiction, together, with clinically proven online family programs and professional training.

 

Welfie, San Diego — Welfie is building AI patients to train the youth mental health workforce and create economic mobility for youth and underserved families.

 

Since 2021, startups from around the world have looked to Kansas as a place to test and launch their innovative community tools. Now in its fifth year, the competition — presented by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas (BCBSKS) — has produced 53 finalists and prompted 55 local and state-wide innovation projects.

The 2024 program, for example, spawned pilot projects that helped improve maternal health, supported Kansans as they quit smoking, and opened new pathways for community health workers to be compensated for the care they provide to underserved Kansans.

“At Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas, we work to help build healthier communities through innovation, collaboration and lasting commitment,” said Virginia Barnes, director of Blue Health Initiatives for BCBSKS. “By partnering startups with Kansas organizations, we’re removing barriers and working toward a health system that is accessible and equitable for all. We’re inspired by how local groups have embraced new technologies to improve community health and look forward to seeing the positive impact from the next group of finalists.”

Along with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas, the 2025 program is supported by the Kansas Health Science University-Kansas College of Osteopathic Medicine, Hinkle Law Firm, the University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita Medical Practice Association, and the Greater Wichita Partnership’s Opportunity Wichita initiative.

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

      2025 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        How city dollars could help crime victims get back to business; Mayor unveils new fund to support struggling entrepreneurs 

        By Tommy Felts | September 13, 2024

        A newly introduced fund aimed at helping KCMO small businesses recover from and prevent property crimes — offering grants up to $3,000 for damage repairs and $5,000 for security upgrades — is a step in the right direction, said Joe Giammanco, whose pizza shop was recently hit by criminals. “Programs like this are going to…

        KC pet tech startup fetches $120K Techstars investment, taking founder’s pitch to Atlanta

        By Tommy Felts | September 12, 2024

        As Kansas City-built Interplay prepares to bring its debut product to market, the pet tech startup is getting a jolt of new energy from one of the nation’s top accelerator programs. The timing couldn’t be better, said founder Jonaie Johnson, announcing Interplay’s acceptance into Techstars Atlanta & New Orleans Powered by J.P. Morgan, which welcomed…

        Swifts endorsement: KC couple opens Cadillac of Cajun restaurants along streetcar line

        By Tommy Felts | September 11, 2024

        Richard and Sheila Swift started small: selling their Cajun cuisine out of an existing bar and grill in Kansas City, Kansas, in late 2022. Within a few months they had a loyal following.  Still, they wanted their own operation. So they paused and spent a month planning their next step. They formed an LLC, splurged…

        Aussie tech company with KC HQ closes $112M round to scale its global expansion, AI innovation

        By Tommy Felts | September 11, 2024

        As global technology company SafetyCulture closes another massive funding round, Kansas City — its largest market and biggest opportunity — stands primed for continued investment at the firm’s U.S. headquarters in the Crossroads Arts District. SafetyCulture on Tuesday announced a $112 million round — which values the Sydney, Australia-based workforce operations company at $1.7 billion —…