SBIR-STTR Award

A mobile application to offer upfront healthcare prices and automated medical billing for socioeconomically disadvantaged Americans
Award last edited on: 3/5/2025

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NINR
Total Award Amount
$1,185,982
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
361
Principal Investigator
Ahmed Marmoush

Company Information

Handl Health LLC

13038 Mozart Way
Cerritos, CA 90703
   (424) 389-6002
   hello@handlhealth.com
   www.handlhealth.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 45
County: Los Angeles

Phase I

Contract Number: 2024
Start Date: ----    Completed: 9/23/2021
Phase I year
2024
Phase I Amount
$1
Direct to Phase II

Phase II

Contract Number: N/A
Start Date: 3/31/2026    Completed: 9/23/2021
Phase II year
2024
(last award dollars: 1741192319)
Phase II Amount
$1,185,981

This SBIR Phase II (R44) grant application will leverage publicly available healthcare service pricing data (i.e. emerging big data resources) to improve health information dissemination and utilization by minority health and disparity individuals, small businesses and communities. The long-term goal is to reduce health literacy barriers around the cost of healthcare and to simplify access to this information through an assisted mobile application and secure short message service (SMS) that helps minority and disparity populations get the care they need at a price they can afford. This will ultimately improve healthcare access and outcomes while reducing the burden of medical debt. Healthcare consumers today have limited information about the cost of a service until after it is rendered, despite there being significant variability in the price of the same service depending on location and provider. This makes it incredibly difficult for patients to make cost-informed choices about where to get healthcare or check the accuracy of medical bills, contributing to the $195bn of medical debt that Americans are burdened with. Minority health and disparity populations are disproportionately impacted by this, with Black Americans, Hispanic Americans and those below the federal poverty level (FPL) more likely to carry medical debt [1]. Soaring healthcare costs and the considerable impacts to minority health and disparity populations have resulted in significant legislative changes to enable healthcare price transparency through mandating public access to pricing data and shopping tools. The overall objective of this SBIR Phase II (R44) research proposal is to create a legislatively compliant healthcare service cost estimator and billing management mobile application, with bilingual and SMS capabilities to assist minority health and disparity populations in America find affordable healthcare and pay accurate medical bills. The technical feasibility of this solution has been validated in Phase I of the research, through preliminary development of a cost estimator and billing management application focused on prices of hospital services only. The proposed Phase II research will build on the preliminary findings and achieve the overall objective through four key aims: Aim 1: Assemble a national pricing database of healthcare services prices published by health plans, using cluster computing to enable high-volume data ingestion; Aim 2: Develop a multi-dimensional healthcare cost estimator for service quote building and approvals across multiple parties for Good Faith Estimates; Aim 3: Integrate a multi-language friendly content management system and HIPAA-compliant short message service (SMS) to support a bilingual (English and Spanish) application and ayschronous communication capabilities; Aim 4: Validate the usability of the advanced Cost Estimator and Billing Management Application (aCEBA) and its effectiveness in improving access and affordability of healthcare for socioeconomically disadvantaged populations.

Public Health Relevance Statement:
Project Narrative Variation in, and limited access to, healthcare service pricing is a significant contributor to the unsustainable growth of out-of-pocket costs for minority health and disparity populations, leading to avoiding necessary healthcare, significant medical debt and financial stress. Revealing price variation and medical billing discrepancies through consumer-friendly applications with bilingual care navigation assistance can reduce health literacy barriers around the cost of healthcare and improve access and affordability. The purpose of this research is to develop a legislatively compliant, bilingual healthcare services cost estimator and billing management mobile application, powered by a national healthcare pricing database and multidimensional search and quote building technology guided by SMS support.

Project Terms:
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