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The digital health startups that are ripe for an IPO

Nov 2, 2020, 20:02 IST
Business Insider
Hollis Johnson/Business Insider

Welcome to Business Insider's daily healthcare newsletter, your daily dose of pharma, biotech, and healthcare news. Subscribe here to get this newsletter in your inbox every weekday.

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Hello,

Happy election day eve. I'm Megan, the healthcare team's startups and venture capital reporter. I'm filling in for Lydia, who's still on her cross-country move to Colorado. I'm covering a lot these days, but I'm been particularly interested in digital health startups that employ gig workers.

Know any that fit the bill? Shoot me a note: mhernbroth@businessinsider.com

First: Dr. Anthony Fauci warned in an interview with The Washington Post that the US needs to make an "abrupt change" to halt a surge in coronavirus cases. And President Donald Trump told supporters that he might fire Fauci after the election.

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Here's the rest of today's healthcare news: Rock Health identified 17 startups that are ripe for an IPO, the founder of shuttered senior care startup Call9 is back with a familiar venture, and healthcare executives are favoring Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden when it comes to their personal campaign donations.

Alto Pharmacy CEO Matt Gamache-Asselin and chief technology officer Jamie KarrakerAlto Pharmacy

Digital health companies are racing to go public. Here are the 17 startups that are ripe for a Wall Street debut.

Read the full story from Blake here>>

Curve Health founder Dr. Timothy Peck (left) and CEO Rob MacNaughton.Curve Health

We got an exclusive look at the 16-slide presentation the founder of a failed telehealth startup that convinced investors to give him another shot at digital health

Read my full story here>>

Getty/Getty

We combed through records of 100 healthcare companies to see who their top executives are donating to in the 2020 election. They reveal a surprising trend.

Read the full story from Kimberly Leonard here>>

More stories we're reading:

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Lydia will be back at the newsletter helm tomorrow. In the meantime, please send any and all startups-related tips to mhernbroth@businessinsider.com.

- Megan

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