More About Jay
Jay Rughani is an investing partner at Andreessen Horowitz where he specializes in healthcare technology, with a focus on AI and data products. He is inspired by entrepreneurs using software to accelerate clinical research, enable better care delivery, and increase affordability for patients. Jay helped to lead CFI s investments in and is partnered with numerous ambitious companies, including Biodock, Freenome, Inductive, Komodo, Midstream, Orchestra, Pearl, Thatch, Thyme, Topography, Turquoise, and Valar.
Prior to joining CFI in 2018, Jay was an early team member at Flatiron Health (acquired by Roche for ~$2B). There, he helped to build some of the company’s first healthcare data & analytics products. He later led numerous commercial partnerships with large biopharma companies, smaller biotechs, and other healthcare organizations. Before Flatiron, he consulted for large healthcare and technology companies around the world at Deloitte, worked at a seed-stage multi-sided network startup called Dealermatch (acquired by Cox Enterprises), and co-founded an unsuccessful startup with his college roommate.
Jay graduated from Emory University with a degree in Mathematics & Economics and grew up mostly in Palm Harbor, FL, apart from a 3 year stint in boarding school in London, UK (not Hogwarts, regrettably).
Latest Content
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This episode features interviews with payor and provider leaders about what they’re seeing and how they’re thinking about AI. Guided by Julie Yoo, general partner, and Jay Rughani, investment partner at CFI bio + Health, you'll hear from the executives about how they're utilizing AI, the KPIs they use to gauge effectiveness, and what they consider to be a good partnership.
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Tennr understands unstructured inputs, applying AI reasoning and decision-making to perform complex end-to-end workflows.
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All this to say—it’s time to figure out how to access, pay for, and deliver curative therapies (amongst other high-cost, complex, specialty drugs), at scale. Let’s dive into the specific challenges that need to be surmounted to get this right.
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100% of stock trades used to be made by humans. Today, 80% are made by computer algorithms. AI is about to bring a similar revolution to healthcare. Over the next few decades, at least half of the $4.3 trillion dollar American healthcare industry will be AI-driven.
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Our view is that 1) the latest advancements in AI offer a massive enablement opportunity to support our clinicians and 2) this can’t happen without the help of forward-thinking policymakers laying the infrastructure for AI-enabled care.