The organization is teaming up with Minnetonka-based Medica to offer a group plan for smaller employers.
Health Care + Med Tech
The Minneapolis-based comapny says the money will help fund current and future clinical trials.
Headquartered in the D.C. area, carafem joins a slew of other pill-based abortion providers in Minnesota.
The company is developing an artificial artery for bypass surgery.
The partnership is aimed at improving health care outcomes at Walmart clinics by using analytics tools provided by UnitedHealth subsidiary Optum.
The Rochester-based health system has established a program to help found and nurture new companies piloting the latest innovations in gene and cell therapies.
A new agreement with San Diego-based National Resilience Inc. is aimed at making Rochester “a center of excellence for biomanufacturing cell and regenerative technologies.”
A new trial will compare Sonex's device to traditional treatments for carpal tunnel syndrome. CEO Bob Paulson says it may pave the way for wider commercial adoption.
The Minnesota manufacturer is spinning off its multibillion-dollar health care business into a new publicly traded company.
Engage Venture Partners, a new Minneapolis-based venture capital firm, plans to invest in medical technology companies, but it’s using an uncommon funding mechanism to do so.
Envoy Medical, a White Bear Lake-based med-tech company, will test the new device with three patients at Mayo Clinic.
Under a new Minnesota law, retailers will soon be able to sell products containing up to 5 milligrams of hemp-derived THC per serving in packages of up to 50 milligrams. Cannabis industry advocates say it's a step toward full-scale legalization.
Though they stopped short of advocating for specific legislative changes, the leaders of 10 health systems in the state have pledged to work together to address gun violence.
Biotech entrepreneur Ping Yeh thought he'd stay with the company he started forever. Then he realized his expertise was more valuable helping scale the next groundbreaking medical company.
A vote was formally filed Thursday for a National Labor Relations Board election to join SEIU Healthcare Minnesota and Iowa.
To avoid delisting, the Eagan-based company must close at or above $1 per share for a minimum of 10 consecutive business days before Nov. 9.
When it first launched six years ago, the Minneapolis-based health insurer was poised to rewrite the rules of the insurance business. But its bid for a piece of the primary care business follows a familiar plot.
The Eagan-based pharmacy benefits manager is buying the pharmacy benefits management organization to address inflated pharmacy costs.