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What health ?
The Swiss Digital Health weekly
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Dear readers,
According to a report by EY, funding for Swiss start-ups fell by 15% to CHF 2.3 billion in 2024. Despite this decline, the health sector remains the top recipient, attracting 45% of total investment. AI, a fast-growing field, plays a crucial role in this trend, particularly in diagnostics and disease prevention.
Recent breakthroughs highlight AI's ability to improve early cancer detection, identifying more cases than traditional methods. In cardiology, AI is emerging as a promising tool for assessing the risk of heart attack before symptoms appear. These advances are bolstering investor confidence in healthcare technology, even in a more challenging financial environment.
What are the key challenges and opportunities ahead? Discover our in-depth analysis in the selected articles of your weekly.
Your Swiss Digital Health team
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Healthtech startups set for growth
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From www.startupticker.ch
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21 février, 07:35
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Four startups in the life sciences sector are developing different solutions – some to improve the diagnosis of neurological disorders and enable aesthetics surgeons to create potential outcomes while others are focusing on developing new therapies for treating cancer, metabolic and rare diseases.
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Pour un nouveau leadership en santé mondiale
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From www.letemps.ch
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20 février, 20:46
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OPINION. Le retrait des Etats-Unis de l’OMS est un séisme pour la santé globale, tant leurs compétences et leurs contributions financières étaient cruciales. L’Europe doit d’urgence combler ce vide, écrivent les professeurs de médecine et chercheurs Antoine Flahault, Alexandra Calmy (tous les deux HUG-Université de Genève), et Michel Kazatchkine (IHEID, Université de Genève)
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This weekly newsletter is created by Swiss Digital Health
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