SC Launch! funding helps reel in med-tech
company
10/30/2006
Sheila
Watson, Charleston Regional Business Journal
Sabal Medical, a
Seattle, Wash.-based medical technology company, has relocated to the
Lowcountry after receiving a $150,000 investment from the South Carolina
Research Authority's SC Launch! program.
Bill Park, Sabal's president and CEO, said the relocation was a
strategic move for the company.
"If you look at the long-term care market and the acute care
market in this area, it makes a lot of sense," Park said. "There are a
lot of hospitals in this region, and for a relatively young company like
ours, that's a good market to be in."
"Besides, in the seven years my partner and I have been in the
industry, we spent most of our time traveling to the East Coast. It'll
be a lot easier to be here in the same area with our customers."
Sabal provides automated medication carts and bar code
verification software designed to ensure proper administration of
medicine.
The carts and accompanying software control access to medication
storage on the hospital floor. They are connected to a secure computer
system that is linked to the hospital, providing information about the
patient, the orders and the medical staff administering the medication,
Park said.
Sabal's product, Park said, is about patient safety.
"Medication errors cost an extra $4,000 per admission on
average, and 38 percent of medication errors are at the bedside where
the nurse administers the medications to the patient," he said.
"What we have is barcoded medication safety software built into
the cart. There are a lot of nursing carts on the market, and there are
third-party software providers, but there isn't a product out there that
integrates the two. That's what we're doing."
Each cart is designed for six patients on a typical
medical-surgical unit or for one to two patients on an intensive care
unit. A fully operational system in a 300-bed hospital would need 50
carts, Park said, adding that each of Sabal's carts with software costs
about $15,000.
Greenville Hospital System will be the test site for the
technology. The company is also in discussion with hospitals in Florida
and Kentucky, including the VA hospital in Lexington, Ky.
When Park settled on Charleston as a site, the first person he
contacted was Ernest Andrade, executive director of the Charleston
Digital Corridor.
"Ernest put us in touch with the Charleston Angel Partners, and
we're currently involved with them, moving through the due-diligence
process for funding," he said. "Then Launch! appeared and we went after
that funding."
SCRA's SC Launch! program links entrepreneurs with intellectual
property and money, investing up to $200,000 per company in the hopes of
generating jobs and stimulating the economy.
"By enticing high-impact technologies like Sabal Medical to
relocate to the state, SCRA is fostering the growth of the knowledge
economy," said Bill Mahoney, SCRA's CEO. "With the economics around
patient safety, the 'soil conditions' around health sciences have a
fairly automatic leverage point. This seed investment will continue to
pay dividends by spurring growth and development in biotechnology."
Even though Sabal Medical has received $150,000 from SC Launch!,
there is actually a commitment for the full $200,000 that most Launch!
companies receive, Park said. The remaining $50,000 will be given after
the company receives a certain amount of funding outside of the Launch!
money.
"We're seeking close to a million (dollars) in the first round,"
he said. "So far we have about $425,000 in committed investment."
In terms of finding office space, Park said Andrade had been
instrumental in securing "incubator" space where the company could
establish itself during its early-stage growth.
"Our 'touchdown space' (at the Charleston Digital Corridor) is
completely full, so I looked around and found another company that was
moving into a space that was basically too big for them," Andrade said.
"So Sabal will be leasing some of the extra office space. It's a perfect
fit for both of them. The larger company gets some revenue from space it
doesn't need just yet, and Sabal enters the Charleston market in prime
space."
Park preferred not to mention the exact location, as he is still
negotiating specifics of the lease.
Sabal will begin hiring in November. Plans for 2007 include
hiring a mix of software engineers and light production workers and
looking for a facility or land on which to build one, Park said.
"We'll need at least 15,000 square feet," he said. "We're
looking along Clements Ferry Road and possibly Daniel Island, but we're
not sure yet. We'll be in touch with some commercial real estate people,
and we'll rely on people like Ernest to steer us in the right
direction."
The company hopes to ramp up to about 50 or 60 employees by the
end of 2009, Park said."That may sound like aggressive growth," he said.
"But actually, we think it's a bit conservative on the sales side." Park
pointed out that Sabal's relocation to the area could have benefits for
the rest of the state as well.
"When we get to our peak, our volumes still won't be high enough
to do overseas fabrication," he said. "So not only are we building
resources for assembly here, but most likely we'll be buying all our
parts from companies in South Carolina. Although we're technically a
software company, we're also a very brick-and-mortar operation."
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