Weekend short takes: Theranos’ Holmes post-prison mental health + more on Shultz and Balwani; global M&A, funding roundup

It’s been a bumpy road this second week of the New Year, with the passing away of genius guitarist Jeff Beck, Lisa Marie Presley, and historian Paul Johnson, the unrelenting Harry Hullabaloo, a rain-soaked downer of a JP Morgan healthcare conference, plus a certain 1967 Chevrolet Corvette convertible (Goodwood Green, 327 ci/350 hp) keeping garage company with…classified files.

Elizabeth Holmes’ post-prison future already being planned–and it’s all about her. But not as before. After her 11 years and three months (pending appeal) in (whatever) Federal prison she will be assigned to, her three years of supervised release are being planned for her. In an ‘exclusive’, celebrity website TMZ reports that Holmes will be required to complete a mental health program that she will pay for (details undisclosed). If her probation officer has any reasonable suspicion that she’s violating the terms of her release, her home, office, vehicle, and property will be subject to police search, including DNA collection. No details in the article beyond that. At this point, Holmes should be working with prison consultants (yes, there are such people, and they are not your legal team) in setting her expectations for Club Fed Life, planning her day-to-day in prison, and readying a reentry plan draft that can make her probation a bit easier on all.

In related Theranos news, a soon-to-be published biography of George Shultz, a government supremo during the Nixon and Reagan Administrations, claims that by then aged 90+ emeritus supported Holmes to the point of fixation. In a nearly 20-year tenure at Stanford’s Hoover Institution, respected and honored by all but with no medical expertise, he suddenly became a huge backer of Holmes, helped her get financing through his network of contacts, joined the board, and invited her to family gatherings. Grandson Tyler Shultz, who joined Theranos with his grandfather’s encouragement, became one of several whistleblowers, leading to a family rift never quite mended at the elder’s death at 100. More in the Guardian

Sunny Balwani also filed a motion this week to stay out of prison during his appeal process, arguing he presents no flight or public safety risk. The Law360 article on the 10 January 25-page filing is unfortunately paywalled.

London-based Huma is buying Frankfurt-based Alcedis, a data specialist for clinical trials. Huma will form an advanced clinical trials division with digital solutions across the entire development pipeline, from early stage through to Phase IV hybrid and fully decentralized trials. Terms were not disclosed. Formerly the mysterious Medopad [TTA 28 May 21], Huma seems to have settled into decentralized clinical trials and disease management using wearable tech and apps. Last March, AstraZeneca took a $33 million [£25 million] share in the company, with Huma acquiring their asthma and heart failure patient platform. Release, Crunchbase, Mobihealthnews

In Singapore, Amplify Health is acquiring AiDA Technologies. AiDA has developed machine learning tech to automate underwriting, claims processing, and detect fraud, waste, and abuse. Amplify has similar lines of business plus digital health programs for chronic disease management. Terms were not disclosed. Fintech Singapore. Also covered in the same Mobihealthnews article are:

  • India’s Dozee receiving funding from the UK government’s British International Investment (BII) for India’s MillionICU initiative. The BII investment will be used to convert 6,000 conventional hospital beds in about 140 public hospitals’ ICUs to stepdown beds. The MillionICU initiative’s goal is to convert one million ICU beds. Express Healthcare (India)
  • Taiwan’s largest hospital, Chang Gung Memorial, has adopted TPIsoftware’s SysTalk.Chat for AI-powered text and smart voice-enabled customer service. The Apo voice and text agent assists 80,000 ‘person-times’ per month in patient intake and setting appointments, admissions, and medical information. This saves 50% of time in appointment scheduling via texts or calls that happen within 2~3 minutes.  AsiaOne (PRNewswire release)

The Theranos Story, ch. 49: CEO Holmes reportedly raising funds for a new company–and feeling like Joan of Arc

[grow_thumb image=”https://telecareaware.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/jacobs-well-texas-woe1.jpg” thumb_width=”150″ /]Here’s the place where your money will go if you’re an investor. John Carreyrou has now compiled his reporting for the Wall Street Journal on Theranos into a new book, Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup, and it is a Must Read for this Editor and anyone interested in the nexus of Tech, Healthcare, and Hype. (The link goes to AbeBooks, a worthy marketplace for independent booksellers.)

According to Mr. Carreyrou, the founder/CEO Miss Elizabeth Holmes–still leading the company despite settling with the SEC on fraud charges, surrendering her voting control, barred from serving as a public company director or officer for 10 years, and still fighting civil lawsuits–is raising fresh funds for a new venture.

Your eyes did not fool you.

Theranos was a Dogpile of Deceit. From hacking standard Siemens blood testing machines to work with tiny samples, falsifying test results, faking up the Edison test machine, to company financials, it was one lie on the other, chronicled for our Readers in nearly 50 chapters and multiple references. 

Mr. Carreyrou was asked by former Timesman and Vanity Fair reporter Nick Bilton whether, in this unmistakable pattern, Ms. Holmes was a sociopath. Mr. Carreyrou wisely refrained from diagnosis based on a used DSM-V, being a reporter and not her psychiatrist. From Mr. Bilton’s interview podcasted on ‘Inside the Hive’:

“At the end of my book, I say that a sociopath is described as someone with no conscience. I think she absolutely has sociopathic tendencies. One of those tendencies is pathological lying. I believe this is a woman who started telling small lies soon after she dropped out of Stanford, when she founded her company, and the lies became bigger and bigger,” Carreyrou said. “I think she’s someone that got used to telling lies so often, and the lies got so much bigger, that eventually the line between the lies and reality blurred for her.”

Mr. Carreyrou, and by inference anyone who doubted her, like her CFO, and especially those who went public with criticism–well, we are the Bad Guys:

“She has shown zero sign of feeling bad, or expressing sorrow, or admitting wrongdoing, or saying sorry to the patients whose lives she endangered,” he said. He explained that in her mind, according to numerous former Theranos employees he has spoken to, Holmes believes that her entourage of employees led her astray and that the bad guy is actually John Carreyrou. “One person in particular, who left the company recently, says that she has a deeply engrained sense of martyrdom. She sees herself as sort of a Joan of Arc who is being persecuted,” he said.

Mr. Carreyrou was set upon by this ‘martyr’s’ legal pitbulls, one David Boies, until he wisely exited stage left with a bushelful of worthless stock [TTA 21 Nov 16].

(And what is it about Stanford University that fosters people like Ron Gutman, recently ousted from HealthTap over employee abuse and intimidation charges in what may be a Silicon Valley First? [TTA 3 May] Here we have someone who plays with people’s lives and health in vital blood testing. Aren’t some ethics courses long overdue?) 

Mr. Bilton makes the extremely fine point that Silicon Valley will continue to be magnetically attracted to founders equipped with a ‘reality-distortion field’ (as he termed Steve Jobs). SV will relegate Theranos to a biotech outlier. Yet as long as Silicon Valley MoneyMen like Tim Draper will back the likes of Elizabeth Holmes as long as they have a good line of (stuff), despite being embarrassingly proven not just (and only) wrong, but now perpetrating fraud, the Jobsian Myth and black turtlenecks will rise again like Dracula. (Another analogy comes to mind, but precocious children might be reading this.)

We haven’t heard the last of her.

An excellent interview by Tom Dotan of Mr. Carreyrou is podcasted on The Information’s 411 in “You’re So Vein”, which gets the award for Title of the Week (trial signup required, or listen on SoundCloud). Starting at 15:00, interesting comments on the why of Sunny Balwani and Ms. Holmes’ series of ‘marks’ including George Shultz. Also Gizmodo and Politico’s Morning eHealth newsletter.

The Theranos Story, ch. 25: is the nadir the $400,000 harassment of whistleblower Tyler Shultz?

[grow_thumb image=”https://telecareaware.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/jacobs-well-texas-woe1.jpg” thumb_width=”150″ /]A story to make your blood…boil. Tyler Shultz is a 26 year old Stanford University grad with a biology undergraduate degree. He ‘fell in love’ with the Theranos vision of quick small blood sample testing after visiting his grandfather’s home near the campus and meeting, of all people, Elizabeth Holmes in 2011. Tyler snagged a summer internship and then a full time job during their salad and steak days (September 2013). He worked on the assay validation team, which verified the accuracy of blood tests run on Edison machines before they were deployed in the lab for use with patients.

Then it all went sideways…and down. Ms Holmes was at his grandfather’s because he is George Shultz, 95 year old former secretary of state and Fellow at the Hoover Institution based at Stanford. Mr Shultz was one of the numerous Washington alumni lending luster to the Theranos board (now advisers), such as Henry Kissinger, Sam Nunn, James Mattis and Bill Frist (the last the only one with an MD).

Tyler Shultz soon discovered, like many new graduates, that his dream job wasn’t all that it was cracked up to be. Except that it wasn’t the hours or the quality of the snacks. He discovered that the Edison machines had highly variable results when tests were rerun with the same blood sample–and they routinely discarded the outliers from the validation reports. Edison testing for a sexually-transmitted infectious disease had a claimed 95 percent sensitivity. “But when Mr. Shultz looked at the two sets of experiments from which the report was compiled, they showed sensitivities of 65% and 80%.” It only got worse when he moved to the production team, where quality control standards were routinely flunked and President Sunny Balwani pressed lab employees to run the tests anyway. Mr Shultz went directly to Ms Holmes, twice, received a nastygram from Mr Balwani for the second, and quit–but not before anonymously sending results to the New York officials who administered a proficiency-testing program and who confirmed that the results sounded like ‘PT cheating’.

The rest of the story by John Carreyou is one of corporate harassment and family estrangement: legal harassment (including private investigators) by none other than David Boies’ law firm on the pretext of ‘confidential information’; the manipulation, currying of favor and misleading of a great but aged man; and a family’s trust fractured if not broken, despite the grandson being proven right, ironically, by the same Washington agencies that his grandfather so loyally served. Mr Shultz is now working on the Cloud DX team for the VITALITI Diagnostic Android Application in the running for the Qualcomm Tricorder XPRIZE. Wall Street Journal  See here for the 24 previous TTA chapters in this Continuing Saga.