Why am I interested in Healthcare

Why am I interested in healthcare?

First, I don't want to die.
Second, it's interesting.
Third, I'm a venture capital investor ... Healthcare is a major (and growing) area of our economy and as such presents investment opportunities. Finally, healthcare and IT are converging.

One area of healthcare that is of interest to an IT investor is known as "personalized medicine". As usual Wikipedia explains this well. My precis is that personalized medicine is old-fashioned medicine plus computers. Personal genetics is a case in point.

Take 23andMe, the genetics company founded by (Google founder) Sergey Brin’s wife Anne Wojcicki that launches today. You can send 23andMe a saliva sample, and they extract lots of information from your DNA about your ancestry and other information that may be health related such as genetic markers for predispositions to certain conditions.

My (lay) understanding is that 23andMe surveys your genome for SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms). Competitor Navigenics will offer a similar service, but will also offer partial or full sequencing of your DNA as well. Sequencing is more expensive for lots of technical reasons, but can provide more information because not all genetic markers are found only in SNPs (or so I'm told).

All this information about your genes is discovered by computerized lab systems, stored in large computers using sophisticated databases, protected by hi-tech security, accessed by complicated software designed to uncover interesting facts and generally spends its life inside IT infrastructure. In the same way Google thinks this is an interesting business (Google invested in 23andMe), I think so too.

The policy implications of all this personal data overlap, for all sorts of reasons, with policy issues related to personal health records, which I wrote about last week. The US Congress is currently considering the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA). The issues of privacy for this information are magnified in the US because of the perverse healthcare system. Insurers and employers are directly charged for the healthcare costs of their subscribers/employees and so may be tempted to use genetic (or other personal health) data to discriminate against applicants. Some physicians do not even order some tests because they know that an insurer or employer could use the fact of just the diagnostic event to exclude someone from employment or coverage (whether or not the test is positive - which also ought not to be a factor).

Between managing the data, creating secure appropriate access for family, care-givers and health providers, and using anonymized data in aggregate for research there are lots of opportunities for a venture capital investor to dabble in this field, as many already have.

However, as you can see, there are good reasons for everyone to be interested and informed.

By the way, one reason NOT to get yourself tested by 23andMe or Navigenics, at least for now, is the fact the medical community has no idea how to deal with the incidentalome.

2 comments:

Jim O'Reilly said...

As a former venture investor myself, and now hooked on the healthcare IT drug, I can certainly empathize with you. I joined one of our portfolio companies 5 years ago (VisionShare) when we had 30 customers. They now have more than 3000 customers across the US using their secure software to connect to Medicare via the Internet for EDI transactions. Now, I'm with another portfoilio company, Diversinet, as we deliver secure mobile PHR applications (and others) to the mobile phone. At 47 I should have a lot more gray hair than I do...especially dealing with this crazy healthcare market. Good luck to you!

S. Erik said...

The ONLY totally secure way of keeping ones Personal Health Record available on the Internet is with the HealthRecordRegistry.com.

The registry is based on the Scandinavian regulations for protection of personal information - the toughest in the world.
Combined with US developed software, the Registry de-personalizes all the information so that there never can be an connection made between the information and the person whose record it is - UNLESS THE PERSON RELEASES THE CODE FOR IT.

Really an outstanding service.