Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
MIT-founded home blood testing company measuring 17 biomarkers via mail-in kits; Khosla-backed developing photonic chip for instant at-home results competing with Everlywell.
SiPhox Health is a home blood testing company founded by MIT scientists that provides mail-in blood test kits measuring 17 key biomarkers — inflammation markers (CRP, homocysteine), cardiovascular health (LDL, HDL, triglycerides, ApoB), metabolic health (HbA1c, glucose, insulin), and hormone levels (testosterone, DHEA, cortisol) — with results delivered within days and integrated with an app for trend tracking and health guidance. Founded in 2020 by Diedrik Vermeulen and Michael Dubrovsky, SiPhox Health is backed by Khosla Ventures, Intel Capital, and Y Combinator.\n\nSiPhox's current product uses at-home finger-prick blood collection with mail-in testing — customers order a $95 kit, collect a small blood sample at home, and mail it to SiPhox's CLIA-certified lab for analysis. The $16/month membership provides regular testing on a quarterly or customizable schedule, enabling biomarker trend monitoring over time rather than single point-in-time snapshots. The underlying technology vision is a photonic chip (silicon photonics-based biosensor) that would enable instant at-home blood analysis without lab processing, with FDA clearance targeted for 2026.\n\nIn 2025, SiPhox Health competes in the home diagnostics and consumer health testing market with Everlywell (the leading at-home test kit brand), Function Health (comprehensive blood panel membership), InsideTracker, and traditional lab companies (LabCorp, Quest Diagnostics) for consumer blood testing. The longevity and proactive health monitoring movement has driven demand for comprehensive biomarker testing beyond what annual physicals provide. The potential photonic chip breakthrough would represent a significant technological leap — enabling truly point-of-care diagnostics without lab infrastructure. The 2025 strategy focuses on growing the biomarker panel subscription business, advancing the photonic chip development toward FDA clearance, and building clinical evidence for the personalized health intervention recommendations.
Oracle Corporation's healthcare IT division (rebranded Cerner, $28.3B acquisition 2022); #2 US hospital EHR, VA/DoD federal EHR program, OCI cloud migration + ambient clinical AI competing with Epic Systems.
Oracle Health is the healthcare technology business unit of Oracle Corporation (NYSE: ORCL) — providing electronic health records (EHR), clinical workflow management, health information exchange, revenue cycle management, and population health analytics to hospitals, health systems, physician practices, ambulatory clinics, and government health agencies globally — operating as the rebranded Cerner Corporation following Oracle's $28.3 billion acquisition of Cerner in June 2022, the largest acquisition in Oracle's history. Oracle Health's EHR platform (the Cerner Millennium clinical information system) powers clinical documentation, physician order entry, nursing workflows, medication administration, and patient care coordination for approximately 30% of US hospitals — making Oracle Health the second-largest EHR vendor in the US hospital market after Epic Systems. A major integration program is underway to migrate Cerner's clinical applications to Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), enabling Oracle Health to leverage Oracle's cloud scale, Oracle's AI capabilities (generative AI for clinical documentation, ambient listening for physician notes), and Oracle's database performance advantages for health record analytics. Oracle Corporation named Clay Magouyrk and Mike Sicilia as co-CEOs in 2025 (replacing Safra Catz), positioning Oracle Health's clinical platform to benefit from the next-generation Oracle leadership team's emphasis on cloud and AI transformation.
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