Health Innovation Roundup

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Applied Pharmaceutical Innovation

Femtech booster emerges to make waves in women's health

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Antigoni Studios, described as Canada's first femtech venture studio, has launched to support early-stage femtech innovators through non-dilutive funding, investor connections, and a membership-based community, among other things. "'Antigoni' comes from the Greek legend of Antigone — the OG disruptive daughter," they wrote. "Antigoni stood for a little bit of chaos and disruption in the name of a greater good. And friends, disrupt is precisely what we intend to do."

The project comes from business partners Kate Ellis and Riya Ganguly. Ellis is the CEO and founder of Bombus R&I; she previously served as a senior policy advisor in health innovation partnerships and strategy with the provincial government. Ganguly is the associate dean for NAIT's JR Shaw School of Business and the board chair for Women + Wealth, with past leadership roles at the University of Alberta, Edmonton Unlimited, and Edmonton Global.

The announcement comes just after several femtech founders and women's healthcare advocates returned from a gathering in Ottawa to support the establishment of a framework for women's health via Bill S-243, which the Senate is debating. Among them was Loreen Wales of My Viva and Revive Wellness. "We are turning words into action for the future of women's health," she declared. You can hear more from Wales in recent interviews with NGBi Lab, a podcast about Canadian life sciences startups, and with The Founder Mindset from Thin Air Labs.

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More health news

  • Acute Care Alberta released 16 recommendations following a review into the death of Prashant Sreekumar in the Grey Nuns Community Hospital emergency room in Edmonton on Dec. 22, 2025. The report advises hospitals to prevent emergency room backlogs by not capping ward admissions and implementing triage doctors, specifically prioritizing the Edmonton region. The report did not satisfy Sreekumar's widow. The province previously announced triage liaison physicians for major Edmonton hospitals, but they are not yet in place.
  • Provincial changes to compensation for surgical hospitalists, who attend to patients after surgery to free up surgeons, may result in "immediate, unavoidable surgical cancellations" at Edmonton hospitals by mid-March, CBC reported.
  • Rayanne Boychuk, who has Graves' disease and recently developed a rare gastrointestinal disorder, is one of 1.4 million Canadians waiting to see a specialist. "It makes you feel helpless, knowing that you need help and you just cannot access it in a normal amount of time," she told Global News in a report about a Fraser Institute study on the cost of medical wait times.
  • The City of Edmonton has seen a 15% increase in Workers' Compensation Board claims filed by city employees since 2021, including 4,613 physical injuries and 613 mental health cases. City officials say Edmonton is considered high risk compared with other municipalities, prompting concerns about workplace safety and potential budget pressures. Mayor Andrew Knack said the issue will be addressed during the budgeting process.
  • Alberta Health Services has launched a pilot project adding three non-urgent response vehicles to Edmonton's emergency health services fleet — with three more in Calgary — to free up ambulances for serious emergencies.

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Sponsored

This roundup was sponsored by Applied Pharmaceutical Innovation.

API is one of Canada's largest not-for-profit life sciences commercialization organizations. We catalyze growth in the life sciences sector by addressing key challenges that hold companies and innovators back.

Applied Pharmaceutical Innovation

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