Despite industry buzz, femtech funding still lags
Femtech has been a hot topic in the digital health world for some time. Despite industry buzz about the tech, investment in the technology still lags behind other sectors.
According to Rock Health, femtech deals have only represented about 3% of digital health deals in the U.S. since 2011.
Reenita Das, partner and SVP for healthcare and life sciences at Frost and Sullivan, said recently femtech deals have actually declined.
“I actually don’t see this as an uptake at all. Digital health investment dollars in 2020 was $14.1 billion dollars. Femtech was only $254 million, so around 1.8% of total investment. 2018 was a banner year for femtech, as we got about 6% of total digital health investment. Femtech investment has been going down despite popular belief.”
Das, who will be speaking at HIMSS21 about the changing femtech industry, said that lack of funding is a leading challenge for the industry. She also noted men are disproportionately represented in software design, which can lead to men designing products used by women.
Women’s health needs to become more mainstream, said Das.
“We need mainstream global companies starting to invest and grow in this area. Currently it is very much a female startup shop culture,“ she said.
There is a lot of room for growth in the space. The global femtech market is expected to reach $1.15 billion by 2025, according to a Frost & Sullivan study.
That same study also described a recent shift in attention from primarily focusing on reproductive-age issues to untapped markets.
“Of the 4.2 billion women in 2030, 1.49 billion will be in the spring of life and almost the same number (over 1 billion) will be in the autumn stage. So I think the two biggies will be fertility and menopause.
“Today, fertility is the largest segment in terms of revenues of the femtech market- but menopause will see the greatest growth,“ Das said. “By 2030, fertility femtech solutions will cross a billion dollars for sure. Menopause will have the fastest growth, close to 20 percent over the next several years.“
Other opportunity areas include mental health, autoimmune diseases, Alzheimer’s and dementia, women’s holistic products across different ages and senior care centers for women, according to Das.
Reenita Das will share more thoughts during his HIMSS21 session, “Future of Femtech and Growth Opportunities.” It’s scheduled for Thursday, August 12, from 1 to 2, in room Venetian San Polo 3404.
More regional news
Peloton to turn its bike workouts into a video game-like experience
Digital addiction treatment company Quit Genius scores $64M
Gamification boosts physical activity, healthy behaviors in new study
Source: Read Full Article