EIT Health aids 11 European startups with €5.5M to alleviate the economic impact of COVID-19

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In the recent development, the EIT Health has awarded €5.5 million to startups in Europe to support with business continuity in response to the disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The ‘Start-up Rescue Instrument’ was initiated by EIT Health in May and called on highly innovative biotech, medtech and digital health startups to apply to receive up to €500,000 in co-investment from EIT Health, in return for options. The instrument was launched to alleviate the financial shock posed by COVID-19 and bridge the fundraising gap of start-ups in Series A, Series B and bridge-financing rounds.

In April, a report from ‘European Startups’, a two-year project backed by the European Commission and European Parliament, found that venture capital (VC) activity is expected to significantly slow during the pandemic, leading to cash flow concerns for start-ups. VC typically accounts for approximately 30-40% of funds raised by start-ups in Europe, which represents a significant proportion. With the report detailing that European start-ups employ two million people, the effects of failing to address the economic impact of COVID-19 on start-ups are far reaching.

“In the current climate, many start-ups are experiencing issues in raising funding rounds that are critical to their future. We have extremely promising start-ups here in Europe, and we cannot sit by and allow the existence of a generation of emerging companies to be threatened by COVID-19. We are doing everything within our power to support start-ups during this difficult economic time”, said Kurt Höller, Director of Business Creation, EIT Health. “However, it is not all doom and gloom – health has never been so front of mind, and start-ups with the ability to be agile within the changing environment can find themselves on the precipice of a whole new wave of opportunity.”

Despite the warning signs, health-related startups are expected to be one of the least affected sectors by COVID-19, with the report from ‘European Startups’ outlining telemedicine as experiencing a 54% growth in share prices since January. Telemedicine is followed by pet care (52%), pharmacy (30%), and groceries (21%).

Startups chosen for support

The 11 startups selected will receive up to €500,000, and are developing solutions in cancer, infectious diseases, wound and joint care, medical imaging, and cardiovascular disease. The following is a list of the start-ups, with more detail about each one:

Allcyte GmbH (Austria): Focuses on functional drug testing with a high-content imaging platform supported by big data to ensure that every cancer patient gets the best treatment possible.

hemotune AG (Switzerland): Uses magnetic blood purification to restore immune balance in sepsis.

HT BioImaging (Israel): Employs an innovative system to measure heat diffusion in biological tissues to enable early detection of cancer in a non-invasive and real-time procedure at the point of care.

ILya Pharma AB (Sweden): Develops next-generation skin biologics to tackle wounds in skin and mucosa that are resistant to standard treatment.

Mowoot (Spain): Develops a purely physical, non-drug and non-invasive solution to treat intestinal transit disorders, such as constipation.

MRIguidance B.V. (The Netherlands): Enables the future of surgery by giving radiologists and orthopedic surgeons radiation-free BoneMRI that visualizes and characterises bone structures.

Neurent Medical (Ireland): Develops a minimally invasive treatment for rhinitis, an inflammation of the mucous membrane inside the nose affecting millions of people worldwide.

Orthox Holdings Limited (UK): Offers a new paradigm in cartilage repair, for increasing mobility, reducing pain and regenerating strength.

Oxford Endovascular Ltd (UK): Develops metallic mesh tube devices, invented by engineers and clinicians at Oxford University, to treat patients suffering from brain aneurysms.

Portabiles HealthCare Technologies (Germany): Develops high-precision solutions for medical gait analysis – for better therapies and better quality of life for patients with movement disorders.

Volumina Medical (Switzerland): Addresses the problem of natural repair of 3D soft tissue by developing highly innovative tissue reconstruction technologies for the market of reconstructive and plastic surgery.

The Start-up Rescue Instrument marks another move from the healthcare innovation network to strengthen Europe’s ability to overcome the challenges posed by the pandemic. In previous months, EIT Health has announced a call for start-ups specialising in COVID-19 to apply for accelerator programme, Headstart; COVID-19 campaigns via its crowdfunding platform, aescuvest; 15 new projects to develop COVID-19 solutions as part of its Rapid Response initiative, and a platform to connect innovators via its website to facilitate collaborative working and action in response to COVID-19.

EIT Health is a network of best-in-class health innovators including approximately 150 partners and is supported by the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT), a body of the European Union. We collaborate across borders to deliver new solutions that can enable European citizens to live longer, healthier lives.

As Europeans tackle the challenge of increasing chronic diseases and multi-morbidity, and seek to realise the opportunities that technology offers to move beyond conventional approaches to treatment, prevention and healthy lifestyles, we need thought leaders, innovators and efficient ways to bring innovative healthcare solutions to market.

Main image credit: EIT Health

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