ModRN Health aims to break down primary care with $35-a-month membership model

April 15, 2019  |  Elyssa Bezner

ModRN Health is injecting life into a decaying healthcare system through holistic approaches, said CaRessa Hutchinson.

“[Patients practically need] a medical degree to be able to navigate the healthcare system. It’s ridiculous,” said Hutchinson, co-founder of the Overland Park-based healthcare platform dedicated to ‘filling in the gaps” for patients. “People are just so overwhelmed and beat down by the system. I think people are just lost and really need our help.”

The web-based platform allows patients to have access to a team of dedicated, specialized nurses and resource partners all powered by compassion, she said, noting the help of a data-driven software service that allows for coordinated care across multiple providers and tracking of a patient’s condition.

[pullquote]

Founders: CaRessa Hutchinson, Dr. Scott Roethle

Founding year: 2015

Amount raised to date: $120,000

Programs completed: Pitch Perfect at the Enterprise Center of Johnson County, Startup Grind Global Conference

Employee Count: 5

[/pullquote]

“Once you build a relationship with a patient, you can really break down those barriers and people can really share those roadblocks with you so you can actually help them with real problems,” she added.

Throughout a seven-year career as a registered pediatric nurse Hutchinson experienced firsthand the struggles patients have to go through entirely unaided by inadequate care, she added, noting the intense journey led to various stages of burnout.

“I started handing out my number to a lot of people, basically helping them on the side for free. I was doing care coordination and connecting them to resources,” Hutchinson said. “I had about 40 people I was helping for free because none of them could have afforded hundreds of dollars for my service, but that’s really how the business model needed look to support that. I was trying to find a way to scale it so I could get it to the people I was really trying to help.”

A startup built for startups

A happy medium arose with a membership model reflecting a $35 a month payment while a chance meeting with a local business owner revealed startups might be let down by the current system as well.

“This guy started a company from the ground up, he built into a successful company, he cares about his employees — then to tell him that the only insurance options [he can give his employees] are going to increase their premiums, but not what they do? It’s bullcrap,” said Hutchinson. “That conversation really opened my eyes to how frustrated [entrepreneurs] were feeling too.”

“I just a had a light bulb moment — his employees are my patients when they’re not with him,” she continued. “There are employers out there that care about the well-being of their people and maybe if we worked together, we could flip the system a little bit.”

ModRN Health is currently partnered with 10 startups and resource organizations to date — the most recent partnership being KC-based SaRA Health — to better service employees and patients across the metro with a bank of referrals from dentists to nutritionists, she added.

“There are other options out there like there might be some holistic options or better things that would be better for you and your family, but you just don’t know,” Hutchinson said.

“This nurse is really your partner,” she continued. “She can be a part of everything from [illness] prevention to your lifestyle, to your emotional capabilities. We just to be the resource hub where you can find access to whatever you need to make the best decision and not just feel so overwhelmed like most people do.”

After only two weeks in operation, the platform already holds two full-time nurses, each able to take on about 500 patients with a pool of 200 potential hires to pull from in next couple of months as changes are made to the backend of the platform, she added.

“We literally just started selling,” Hutchinson laughed. “Now that we’re actually trying now, we have well over $4 million in annual recurring revenue in our pipeline. It seems that people are going to be moving through the pipeline fairly quickly.”

With burnout in nursing so common, finding licensed healthcare professionals ready for a change in leadership took just a few announcements in the right places, said Hutchinson.

“When I reach out and tell them, ‘Hey, you could actually be an advocate, actually care about your patient, actually have that relationship with them again, and be what you thought you were going to get to be when you went to nursing school…’ It’s crazy how excited they are,” she said.

“They loved nursing. It was just too high of a cost for them personally.”

All in on Kansas City

Moving to Kansas City from her hometown in Wichita took a sign in the form a well-chosen Airbnb, said Hutchinson.

“It was hard to be taken seriously in that first year,” she said. “I had to fight through all of that and I told my husband, ‘If we’re going to do it, we’re going to have to jump all in and I don’t think we’re going to be able to do it here.’ So, I grabbed an Airbnb [in Kansas City] for three days and I made sure the [owner] was an entrepreneur.”

“I pitched to him the whole three days,” she laughed.

The owner ended up giving the couple an apartment on the Country Club Plaza for low rent for the first six months, Hutchinson said.

“I called home and said, ‘I think we have a sign,’” she said. “My husband found a job [in Kansas City] pretty quickly after that within days. We moved our kids from the house they’ve been in their whole life pretty much.”

Though the initial move took some adjustment, the three teenagers quickly became helpful assistants in visiting long-time patients of Hutchinson and understood the need for the change, she added.

“They would hear how upset I would be when coming from the hospital — like I was on the wrong side almost — so I think teaching them is one thing, but showing them is saying that this is how we stand up for people who can’t stand up for themselves,” Hutchinson said. “It’s one thing to say you’ll sacrifice [things] to help other people, but we’re really going to do it.”

The entrepreneurial mindset seems to have been inherited, she added, with pride.

“I don’t think they necessarily want to be in healthcare, but when they talk about the future — they want to change it,” Hutchinson said.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2019 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        In time for Mother’s Day: Ovatemp wants to boost women’s fertility

        By Tommy Felts | May 8, 2015

        The arrival of Ana Mayer’s baby girl isn’t the only thing she’ll be thinking about this Mother’s Day. Mayer — who’s among the newest founders in the Techstars-led Sprint Mobile Health Accelerator in Kansas City — will also be mulling how to further develop Ovatemp, the Boston-based ovulation tech company she leads. Ovatemp offers women…

        ThinkViral founder: Reflection a key to achieve success

        By Tommy Felts | May 7, 2015

        Welcome to the ‘Think’ column, a series aimed at helping entrepreneurs stop and think about the various aspects of starting and running a business. This week, ThinkViral President Anne Cull introduces the column and emphasizes why pointed reflection on lessons learned is central to a successful business strategy. ThinkViral is a full service social media…

        Founder of defunct Symptomly shares lessons from failure

        By Tommy Felts | May 7, 2015

        Failure is a touchy subject. But for Derek Bereit — the former CEO and co-founder of mobile asthma tracking company Symptomly — his company’s failure was an opportunity shrouded in a difficult situation. Rather than sulking, Bereit sat down with Startland News to discuss Symptomly’s demise, the lessons it provided him and the possibilities that…

        Founders discuss tough decisions entrepreneurs face

        By Tommy Felts | May 6, 2015

        Two founders took the stage at Kansas City’s chapter of 1 Million Cups to discuss the vast variety of tough decisions entrepreneurs face when starting and running a business. Stuart Ludlow, co-founder of RFP 365 and Sarah Shipley, co-founder of BikeWalkKC, offered insights and advice for those launching a business. Read about RFP365’s recent funding…