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These 12 startups were selected for Village Capital’s healthcare accelerator

digital health

Village Capital, in collaboration with Johnson & Johnson Impact Ventures, announced the 12 early-stage startups that were selected to take part in the “Building A Culturally Competent Healthcare System” program. The accelerator program will support tech-enabled startups focused on providing culturally competent care to Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC), low-income, or other underserved communities.

Selected startups

The following 12 startups have been selected:

Each startup selected for the accelerator will work closely with mentors, potential clients and partners, as well as investors they need to scale their impact, using tools developed to help their self-evaluation, such as Village Capital’s Abaca platform. The top two peer selected companies will be eligible to receive $100,000 USD each in grant funding from Johnson & Johnson Foundation.

On the record

“Despite spending more on healthcare than any other country in the world, the US faces vastly inequitable health outcomes for marginalized populations,” said Matt Zieger, Chief Programs Officer Americas at Village Capital. “Village Capital is excited to work with Johnson & Johnson Impact Ventures to support these 12 startups that are improving health equity by addressing the social, economic, cultural or linguistic needs of patients.”

The context

In total, more than 70 startups applied to the program. Each startup was evaluated on criteria including team, business model, and product-market fit. The selection process involved a diverse Advisory Board that included investors, entrepreneurs and industry leaders, but also academics and activists who spoke to the challenges at hand.

The strength of this cohort lies in its diversity. Village Capital is relentlessly focused on supporting founders with lived experience in the problems they’re solving because they create stronger companies. 50% of startups in the program have a female founder or co-founder, 83% have a Black and/or Latinx founder, and 58% are headquartered outside of New York, Boston, or San Francisco/Bay Area.

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