Intron Health, a company focusing on clinicalSpeech RecognitionofStartups, announced that it had received $1.6 millionSeed roundFinancingThe company was founded by Tobi Olatunji, a former physician who trained and practiced in Nigeria and saw firsthand the inefficiencies of the healthcare system, including cumbersome paperwork and the difficulty of tracking them.
Olatunji is interested in improving the efficiency of healthcare and has a master's degree in medical informatics from the University of San Francisco and a master's degree in computer science from Georgia Institute of Technology. While working in technology companies, he has gained extensive experience in the field of natural language processing (NLP), especially in the healthcare field.
Intron Health's initial goal was to digitize African hospital operations through an electronic medical record (EMR) system. But Olatunji found that doctors preferred to write by hand rather than type. This prompted him to explore how to improve the basic problem: how to make doctors' basic data entry and writing work more efficient.
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Since existing speech-to-text technology has many problems in dealing with African accents and the pronunciation of complex medical terms, Olatunji realized the need to develop a speech recognition technology that can recognize African accents. Intron Health's speech recognition tool can be integrated with existing EMR systems and has been adopted in 30 hospitals in five markets including Kenya and Nigeria.
The technology has had some immediate positive results. For example, Intron Health helped one of West Africa’s largest hospitals reduce wait times for radiology results from 48 hours to 20 minutes. Such efficiencies are critical in healthcare delivery, especially in Africa, where doctor-to-patient ratios are among the lowest in the world.
Olatunji said hospitals have invested a lot of money in equipment and technology, and it is important to make sure they apply that technology. Intron Health can provide value to help them increase the adoption rate of EMR systems.
Going forward, Intron Health is exploring new areas of growth and is backed by several venture capital firms and angel investors including Microtraction, Plug and Play Ventures, Jaza Rift Ventures, Octopus Ventures, Africa Health Ventures, OpenseedVC, Pi Campus, Alumni Angel, BakerBridge Capital, and others.
Intron Health is working on refining noise reduction and ensuring the platform works well even with low bandwidth, and is also developing transcription capabilities for multi-speaker conversations and integrated text-to-speech capabilities.
Olatunji's plan is to add intelligent systems or decision-support tools for tasks like prescribing or lab testing. These tools can help reduce doctor errors, ensure patients are adequately cared for, and speed up work.
Intron Health is one of a growing number of generative AI startups in the healthcare space, including Microsoft’s DAX Express, which reduces administrative tasks for clinicians by generating notes in seconds. The global speech and voice recognition market is expected to be worth $84.97 billion by 2032, growing at a compound annual growth rate of 23.71% from 2024.
In addition to building speech technology, Intron Health is also playing a key role in speech research in Africa, recently partnering with Google Research, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and PATH’s Digital Square to evaluate popular large language models (LLMs) such as OpenAI’s GPT-4o, Google’s Gemini, and Anthropic’s Claude in 15 countries to identify LLMs’ strengths, weaknesses, and risk of bias or harm. This is all to ensure culturally appropriate models are available for African clinics and hospitals.