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A changing investment landscape is reshaping health innovation, opening extraordinary opportunities to advance healthcare around the world. We partner with funders and technologists to ensure breakthroughs become solutions that improve lives at scale.
Our portfolio ranges from technologies primed for translation as commercial products to public interest health technologies built for collective benefit.
OUR PROCESS
We provide support at critical junctures across the technology lifecycle:
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Design
Identify innovative ideas and design programs that get technology to people
Build
Advance technical development and operational readiness
Scale
Prepare organizations and technologies for growth and adoption
Finance
Create financing strategies that seed and sustain innovation
Funder Partnerships
We act as a catalyst and connector for funders of translational research portfolios to ensure technologies are designed, developed, and driven to become real-world solutions.
Public Interest Technology Partnerships
The Public Interest Health Technologies program at Digitalis Commons supports organizations tackling pressing health challenges that serve the common good. These innovations are intentionally designed, deployed, or governed to solve problems where markets fall short. Through our services, we bring expertise across design, growth, and finance—helping to ensure transformative technologies can make a lasting difference.
Digitalis Commons also runs the Scale Studio, an accelerator program that enrolls select public interest health technology organizations working to grow into scalable solutions that reach the communities they are meant to serve.

Digitalis Commons has partnered with Cradle Cincinnati to scale their approach to improve maternal and infant mortality rates.

Digitalis Commons supported the launch of DiMe, a leading nonprofit advancing digital medicine to optimize health.

Digitalis Commons has partnered with Medic, steward of the Community Health Toolkit (CHT), an open-source health technology designed to support community health workers in low- and middle-income countries.


