Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Acton MA tubeless insulin pump (NASDAQ: PODD) $2.18B FY2024 revenue (+21%); Omnipod 5 automated insulin delivery with Dexcom/Libre integration, type 2 expansion, competing with Medtronic MiniMed and Tandem.
Insulet Corporation is an Acton, Massachusetts-based medical device company — publicly traded on the NASDAQ (NASDAQ: PODD) as an S&P 500 Health Care component — developing, manufacturing, and commercializing the Omnipod insulin delivery system: a tubeless, wearable, waterproof insulin pump patch worn directly on the body without tubing connections to a separate controller, automatically delivering insulin to people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes through approximately 5,000 employees globally. In fiscal year 2024, Insulet reported revenues of $2.18 billion (+21% year-over-year), driven by Omnipod 5 (Omnipod's automated insulin delivery — AID — system integrating with Dexcom CGM and Abbott FreeStyle Libre sensors to automatically adjust insulin delivery based on real-time glucose readings without manual user input), which drove international expansion in Europe and adoption in type 2 diabetes patients who previously used multiple daily injections rather than insulin pumps. CEO Jim Hollingshead has accelerated Omnipod's differentiation through the automated insulin delivery positioning: Omnipod 5's algorithm automatically modulates basal insulin rates every 5 minutes based on continuous glucose monitor readings — reducing A1c levels and time-in-hypoglycemia without requiring the user to manually program correction boluses for most scenarios — transforming diabetes management from active self-management to a background automated process that dramatically improves quality of life for insulin-dependent diabetics.
World's largest medical device company with $32.4B FY2024 revenue; Hugo robotic surgery challenges Intuitive Surgical; MiniMed automated insulin system; Patient Monitoring spin-off 2024; NYSE: MDT.
Medtronic plc is the world's largest medical device company, founded in 1949 by Earl Bakken and Palmer Hermundslie in a Minneapolis, Minnesota garage—where Bakken invented the first wearable external pacemaker—and now incorporated in Ireland with operational headquarters in Dublin, trading on NYSE (MDT). The company generated approximately $32.4 billion in revenues for fiscal year 2024 (ending April 26, 2024) under CEO Geoff Martha, spanning cardiovascular, neuroscience, surgical, and diabetes therapy technologies. Medtronic's 2015 acquisition of Covidien for $49.9 billion—at the time the largest medical device merger in history—added surgical instruments, patient monitoring, and respiratory interventions while enabling Irish incorporation that reduced the company's effective tax rate. In 2024, Medtronic announced the spin-off of its Patient Monitoring & Respiratory Interventions segment as an independent company (NewCo), sharpening focus on higher-margin, high-growth therapy areas.
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