| Name | Title | Contact Details |
|---|
At Oerth Bio™, we are on a mission to change perceptions of agricultural chemistry We are leading a new and transformative approach to crop protection, crop health and healthy food by leveraging our proprietary PROTAC® protein degraders, or proteolysis-targeting chimeras. PROTAC protein degraders work by harnessing the plant`s own natural protein disposal system to degrade and remove unwanted proteins. We are an early-stage agriculture biotechnology company located in the heart of downtown Durham, North Carolina.
WRKOUT is the future of fitness - delivering premium personal training LIVE to any device. No recorded content. No expensive equipment.
Sobi is an international specialty healthcare company dedicated to developing treatments and extensive patient support networks for people with rare and difficult to treat diseases. These patients are often misunderstood, misdiagnosed and have limited medical options otherwise. This commitment has led to our world-class capabilities in protein biochemistry and biologics manufacturing, recognized by our leading industry partners.
Sharecare is the digital health company that helps people manage all their health in one place. The Sharecare platform provides each person – no matter where they are in their health journey – with a comprehensive and personalized health profile, where they can dynamically and easily connect to the information, evidence-based programs and health professionals they need to live their healthiest, happiest and most productive life. With award-winning and innovative frictionless technologies, scientifically validated clinical protocols and best-in-class coaching tools, Sharecare helps providers, employers and health plans effectively scale outcomes-based health and wellness solutions across their entire populations.
DCPCA is a nonprofit health reform organization founded in 1996 by health care professionals who were concerned that the shortage of primary health care in the District was contributing to increasingly poor health outcomes for DC's most vulnerable residents. With a budget of $140,000 in seed money from the federal government's Bureau of Primary Care, Sharon Baskerville became DCPCA's first executive director in 1998. As DCPCA established itself in the late 1990s, District voters elected a new mayor and six new members of the DC Council. The improved political environment made it possible for the District's budget to emerge from direct federal control. Under these new conditions, DCPCA emerged as a health reform leader and quickly became the local voice promoting progressive health care financing and public policy, galvanizing political support at the local and federal levels.