In this week’s edition of InnovationRx, we look at Trump’s massive health agency layoffs, Palantir’s trade secret lawsuit, Gather Health’s new primary care model, Airna’s $155 million deal, and more.
Continue Reading
News Source: www.forbes.com

In this week’s edition of InnovationRx, we look at Trump’s massive health agency layoffs, Palantir’s trade secret lawsuit, Gather Health’s new primary care model, Airna’s $155 million deal, and more.
News Source: www.forbes.com

Inner Cosmos is a startup reinventing care for depressed patients unresponsive to conventional pharmaceutical therapies. Since the FDA granted the company a device exemption to initiate a feasibility study in 2022, they have fitted three patients with their Digital Pill device. This makes the company an early first mover in psychiatric brain-computer interfaces and ushers in a new era for the BCI field.
Writing new brain chemistry at the push of a button is not a new idea. Deep brain…
News Source: www.forbes.com

Illustration of a woman drinking coffee, surrounded by coffee cups, 1930s. Screen print. … More
Few substances have woven themselves so seamlessly into the fabric of daily life as caffeine. Found in coffee, tea, chocolate and countless performance-enhancing supplements, this naturally occurring stimulant has long been prized for its ability to increase alertness and combat fatigue. Yet beneath its ubiquitous presence lies a complex…
News Source: www.forbes.com

Wounded skin cells scream with slow-motion electric pulses.
Such electric spikes are a surprise because only nerve cells were thought to communicate this way. These signals move at a snail’s pace compared to nerve impulses and can be detected at least 500 micrometers away — about the distance of 40 cells — researchers report in the March 25 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The pulsing electrical waves may help injured cells’ neighbors prepare to heal…
News Source: www.sciencenews.org

As soon as the genetic testing company 23andMe filed for bankruptcy on March 23, 2025, concerns about what would happen to the personal information contained in its massive genetic and health information database were swift and widespread. A few days after, a U.S. judge ruled that the company could sell its consumer data as part of the bankruptcy.
The attorneys general of several states warned their citizens to delete their genetic data. California urged its citizens to request that…
News Source: theconversation.com

The 2025 Los Angeles wildfires reduced more than 15,000 structures to ash in a matter of days. Among the devastation were 11 public and private schools and 30 child care facilities. In all, the fires disrupted the education and daily lives of over 700,000 students.
The fires first erupted on Jan. 7, 2025, in the Pacific Palisades, a small enclave of Los Angeles, and in Eaton Canyon, where the tight-knit community of Altadena is nestled in the foothills just north of Pasadena. Fierce…
News Source: theconversation.com

WASHINGTON, DC – FEBRUARY 25: Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) departs the House chamber … More
Signs of a potential recession this year have been flashing in recent weeks. This…
News Source: www.forbes.com

Long Beach, N.Y.: The exterior of The Mt. Sinai South Nassau Hosptial’s emergency room in Long … More
Hospitals across diverse markets in the United States are terminating non-clinical personnel as they confront intensifying financial pressures. Escalating operational…
News Source: www.forbes.com

The pathogens Giardia duodenalis and Cryptosporidium are common causes of sometimes-fatal intestinal diseases in humans, other mammals and birds worldwide.
Now, findings from researchers at Texas A&M University provide new, evidence-based insight into minimizing the risk of these diseases at canine facilities.
“In adult, healthy humans and animals, these diseases usually cause diarrhea and occasionally other minor ailments, but for infants, puppies and the immunocompromised, infection could…
News Source: www.sciencedaily.com

In mice, autism symptoms arise when a certain pair of competing nerve proteins falls out of equilibrium, according to a study published April 1 in the open-access journal PLOS Biology by Dongdong Zhao of Wenzhou Medical University, China, Yun-wu Zhang of Xiamen University, China, and colleagues.
Approximately 1% of the world population is considered to have Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), exhibiting a series of social and cognitive symptoms. Previous research has linked certain genetic…
News Source: www.sciencedaily.com