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BioHealth Innovation Archives - BioHealth Innovation

NIHFCU President and CEO, and BHI Board Member, Rick Wieczorek Named 2026 CEO of the Year by MD|DC Credit Union Association

By News

Rick Wieczorek, President and CEO of the NIH Federal Credit Union and a member of the BioHealth Innovation, Inc. Board of Directors, has been named 2026 CEO of the Year by the MD|DC Credit Union Association.

The award recognizes Wieczorek’s leadership of NIHFCU through a period of growth, operational change, industry disruption, and continued service to members across the region’s healthcare and biomedical communities. Since becoming CEO in 2013, he has helped guide NIHFCU through major technology and service initiatives, including a core conversion, expanded digital banking capabilities, online account opening, and enhancements to lending systems.

NIHFCU, based in Rockville, Maryland, serves more than 40,000 members and has assets of more than $820 million. The credit union primarily supports the Washington, D.C. region’s healthcare and biomedical industries, making its mission closely aligned with the broader BioHealth Capital Region ecosystem.

“Rick’s leadership has been felt not only at NIHFCU, but across the broader regional community,” said Rich Bendis, Founder, President and CEO of BioHealth Innovation, Inc. “As a member of the BHI Board of Directors, Rick brings a thoughtful, mission-driven perspective that reflects his commitment to helping people, organizations, and communities succeed. We are pleased to congratulate him on this well-deserved recognition.”

Under Wieczorek’s leadership, NIHFCU has also received several “best place to work” awards and was recognized by Newsweek as one of the Best Credit Unions in America for 2026. The MD|DC Credit Union Association also highlighted his service as a former Association Board Chair and his steady leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic.

BHI congratulates Rick Wieczorek and the NIH Federal Credit Union team on this recognition and thanks Rick for his continued leadership and service to the BioHealth Capital Region.

Read the original announcement here: https://www.mddccua.org/2026/06/association-names-nih-fcu-ceo-rick-wieczorek-2026-ceo-of-the-year/

How ARPA-H Is Opening New Doors for Small Businesses: Sam Gussman-Toh on Funding, Commercialization, and Breakthrough Health Innovation on BioTalk

By BioTalk with Rich Bendis Podcast, News

In this episode of BioTalk with Rich Bendis, Sam Gussman-Toh, Portfolio Manager for the Small Business Program at ARPA-H, joins the conversation to discuss how the agency is creating new pathways for small businesses developing ambitious health technologies.

Sam explains how the ARPA-H model differs from traditional federal funding programs, with a focus on moonshot health solutions, program manager-led portfolios, milestone-driven contracts, and a strong emphasis on moving technologies toward real-world use. He also discusses how the Small Business Program supports SBIR and STTR performers through Phase I, Phase II, Direct to Phase II, and Fast Track awards.

Listen now on your favorite podcast platforms:
Apple: https://apple.co/4wRucB6
Spotify: https://bit.ly/4dOOMte
iHeart: https://ihr.fm/4e5doPz
Amazon: https://amzn.to/4e5M3Na 
YouTube: https://bit.ly/4e6otji 
TuneIn: https://bit.ly/4wXSDgn

The conversation highlights how ARPA-H is working with ambitious small businesses, including non-traditional companies and early-stage startups that may be working with the federal government for the first time. Sam also shares how commercialization support is built into the program, including ARPA-H’s Entrepreneur-in-Residence partnership with BioHealth Innovation. Through that relationship, BHI EIRs help performers strengthen regulatory strategy, intellectual property planning, go-to-market strategy, reimbursement considerations, and other key commercialization needs.

Sam also discusses ARPA-H’s draft Small Business Program solicitation, the upcoming virtual Proposers’ Day on June 11, and what companies should know about the application process, topic areas, technical pitches, and future funding opportunities.

Editing and post-production work for this episode was provided by The Podcast Consultant.

Sam Gussman-Toh is Portfolio Manager for the Small Business Program at ARPA-H, where he coordinates and oversees the agency’s SBIR/STTR awards and commercialization support services for participating small businesses. Sam joined ARPA-H in 2022 and wrote the agency’s first SBIR/STTR solicitation. He has held several roles in the Office of Commercialization and has worked closely with Program Managers to build the agency’s commercialization infrastructure and strategy. Previously, Sam designed and managed rapid prototyping programs across agencies in the Department of War. His technical background is in computer science, with interests in computer vision, autonomous robotic systems, and computational pathology.

BioHealth Innovation Board Member Prashant Panchal Named Head of Portfolio, Capacity and Business Operations, Biopharmaceutical Development at AstraZeneca

By News

BioHealth Innovation, Inc. (BHI) congratulates Prashant Panchal, MS, MBA, a member of the BHI Board of Directors, on his recent promotion at AstraZeneca from Director to Senior Director. His new business title is Head of Portfolio, Capacity and Business Operations.

In this role, Panchal’s scope is focused on the Biopharmaceutical Development department within Biopharma R&D. The team supports all biologics projects, helping advance the planning, operations, and coordination needed to move complex programs forward across AstraZeneca’s biologics portfolio.

“I’m excited to step into this new role and grateful for the opportunity to lead Portfolio, Capacity, and Business Operations for Biopharmaceutical Development at AstraZeneca. This is a tremendous opportunity to continue supporting our world-class scientists and engineers as we advance a complex biologics portfolio, deliver innovative therapies that make a meaningful difference for patients, and contribute to the local life sciences ecosystem.”

Panchal brings a strong combination of scientific training, business strategy, and operational leadership to his work. Prior to this promotion, he served as Director of Business Planning and Operations at AstraZeneca, where he oversaw capacity planning, capital expenditure, contracting, portfolio management, and governance for a department of more than 1,100 employees supporting over 100 drug programs.

His career has included roles across several leading biopharmaceutical organizations, including Eisai Pharmaceuticals, Teva Biopharmaceuticals USA, and AGC Biologics, one of the sector’s largest contract manufacturers. This experience has given him a broad view of drug development, manufacturing, business planning, and the operational needs of growing biopharma organizations.

Beyond his role at AstraZeneca, Panchal has been an active contributor to the region’s biohealth ecosystem. As a member of the BHI Board of Directors, he supports the organization’s mission to accelerate the commercialization of biohealth technologies and strengthen the BioHealth Capital Region. He also serves on the board of the Pinkney Innovation Complex for Science and Technology at Montgomery College (PIC MC), advancing workforce development, industry-academic collaboration, and early-career mentorship. In addition, he serves on the board of the Montgomery County Economic Development Corporation (MCEDC), where he brings a life sciences industry and business perspective to support economic growth across the county.

Panchal holds a Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences with a focus in Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics from the University of Maryland, along with a Master of Science in Biotechnology Management and an MBA from the University of Maryland Global Campus.

BHI congratulates Prashant on this well-earned promotion and looks forward to his continued leadership and contributions to the region’s growing biohealth community.

BioHealth Innovation Welcomes Caroline Popper and Julie Wilkinson as Entrepreneurs-in-Residence

By News

BioHealth Innovation, Inc. (BHI) is pleased to announce the addition of Caroline Popper and Julie Wilkinson as Entrepreneurs-in-Residence (EIRs). Together, they bring decades of experience across medical technology, diagnostics, digital health, commercialization strategy, FDA pathways, manufacturing, corporate development, and venture-building.

Popper is a business leader, physician, and lawyer with more than 30 years of experience in medical technology, diagnostics, and the life sciences. Her work has focused on technologies and services that improve healthcare efficiency, with a growing emphasis on the intersection of healthcare, biology, technology, and artificial intelligence.

She has held operational and strategic roles at BD and bioMérieux, served as Chief Business Officer of MDS Proteomics, founded Popper and Company, and co-founded The Sherpanis with Julie Wilkinson. She also served as Chief Commercial Officer of Johns Hopkins Precision Medicine and led commercialization activities for the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab Healthcare Mission Area. She currently serves as co-chair of the American Bar Association Healthcare Section AI Task Force.

Wilkinson is a scientist, C-level executive, and entrepreneur with more than 30 years of experience advancing MedTech innovations through FDA clearance and GMP manufacturing across medical devices, digital health, and in vitro diagnostics. She has led R&D efforts at major health technology companies, including Abbott, Beckman Coulter, and Agilent, and founded and grew a life science service company from zero to $10 million before a successful exit.

Her expertise spans FDA product development pathways, MedTech technology readiness, investor diligence, product-market fit, value proposition development, business model design, and commercialization strategy. She was also part of the $2 billion RADx Tech NIBIB initiative, which helped create U.S. manufacturing capacity for COVID-19 tests, and has led company teams through FDA authorization and manufacturing scale-up for new diagnostics.

“Caroline and Julie bring the kind of hands-on operating experience that is invaluable to entrepreneurs and early-stage companies,” said BHI President and CEO, Rich Bendis. “Their combined expertise in diagnostics, MedTech, FDA strategy, commercialization, manufacturing, AI, and venture-building will strengthen BHI’s ability to support innovators as they move from promising technologies to market-ready solutions.”

“Caroline and I are very excited to join the BHI Entrepreneur-in-Residence team and support our capital region entrepreneurs as they accelerate the transformation of innovative ideas into market-ready products. Turning an idea into a successful commercial product takes far more than funding and determination, it requires the collaboration of experienced experts working together as an active team. The Entrepreneur-in-Residence program led by Rich Bendis exemplifies that collaborative approach and provides entrepreneurs with the strategic support needed to move innovation forward,” said Julie Wilkinson, New Entrepreneur-in-Residence, BioHealth Innovation.

As Entrepreneurs-in-Residence, Popper and Wilkinson will work with BHI and its partners to help emerging companies evaluate technology readiness, refine commercialization strategies, navigate regulatory and development milestones, assess market opportunities, and build stronger pathways toward investment, partnership, and growth.

Their addition reflects BHI’s continued commitment to expanding its EIR network with leaders who have deep technical expertise, operating experience, and a strong understanding of what it takes to move biohealth innovations from concept to commercialization.

Organizations and Institutions interested in EIR support through BHI are encouraged to contact Rich Bendis, President and CEO of BioHealth Innovation, at rbendis@biohealthinnovation.org.

About BioHealth Innovation, Inc.

BioHealth Innovation, Inc. (BHI) is a nonprofit innovation intermediary that accelerates the commercialization of promising biohealth technologies. BHI works with entrepreneurs, startups, research institutions, federal laboratories, universities, investors, and industry partners to help move science from discovery to market.

Through its Entrepreneurs-in-Residence program, non-dilutive funding support, international soft-landing services, and commercialization expertise, BHI helps companies and innovators strengthen business strategies, pursue funding, connect with partners, and navigate the path toward growth. BHI is also a founding member and manager of the BioHealth Capital Region brand, supporting the continued development of Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Virginia as one of the nation’s leading life sciences clusters.

Rich Bendis Featured in PharmaBoardroom Interview on the BioHealth Capital Region

By News

Rich Bendis, Founder, President and CEO of BioHealth Innovation, Inc. (BHI), was recently featured in PharmaBoardroom for a conversation on the growth of the BioHealth Capital Region and the role BHI plays in helping life sciences companies move from promising ideas to real commercial opportunities.

In the interview, Rich reflects on the early need that led to the creation of BHI. The region already had world-class research, major federal assets, leading academic institutions, and a strong base of life sciences companies. What was missing was a stronger bridge between science, entrepreneurs, investors, industry, and the market. BHI was built to help fill that gap.

The conversation also looks at how the BioHealth Capital Region became a more connected and recognized life sciences cluster across Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Northern Virginia. Rich discusses why regional collaboration matters and how a shared identity has helped strengthen the area’s national and global position.

The article touches on the funding challenges facing early-stage biotech companies today, including tighter venture capital markets and greater pressure on non-dilutive funding programs. Rich shares how BHI works with companies to pursue SBIR and other federal funding opportunities, strengthen proposals, connect with investors, and identify strategic partners.

Rich also discusses BHI’s work with international companies looking to enter the U.S. market. That support often goes beyond simple introductions and includes helping companies understand market fit, U.S. presence, reimbursement, intellectual property, and the partnerships needed to grow successfully.

The interview offers a thoughtful look at where the BioHealth Capital Region has been, where it is today, and how BHI continues to support entrepreneurs, companies, and partners working to bring new health technologies forward.

Read the full PharmaBoardroom interview to learn more about Rich’s perspective on BHI, the BioHealth Capital Region, and the future of life sciences commercialization.

Thank you to PharmaBoardroom for the opportunity to share this story and highlight the work happening across the BioHealth Capital Region.

BHI EIR Insights: 7 Tactics to Optimize Launch Messaging – Part VI

By EIR Insights, News

by Jonathan Kay, MPP, Managing Partner, Health Market Experts & BioHealth Innovation, Inc. Entrepreneur-in-Residence

To recap, the first 5 posts of our series covered:

  1. Test, Don’t Guess: Adopt a data-driven mindset about messaging impact
  2. Know Your Stakeholders: Avoid a one-size-fits-all approach
  3. Listen First: What are  your stakeholders saying and how?
  4. Message Anatomy: Ensure messages get the job done
  5. Measuring Success: Define metrics of success upfront

Insight 6: Just Start

It’s true we want to pursue all 5 tactics above. But that doesn’t mean we always can.  Sometimes clients or would-be clients insist:

  • Time is too limited, so they can’t test
  • The target audience is rare or ultra rare, so they can’t test

🛑 Hold on! Don’t skip testing even in these situations. As the saying goes, Don’t let perfect be the enemy of the good.(That’s typically attributed to surgeons!🥼)

Real-world problems require real-world problem-solving. To know in advance how well your messages will perform, ask real-world stakeholders. Even if time is extremely limited. Even if audiences seem too hard-to-reach. (We can help you in both cases. While we encourage clients to have a launch runway and notify us in advance, typically we can line up test audiences in a day or two, or faster!)

Testing messages BEFORE launch can improve early uptake 📈, increase commercial success, and save time and budget later. It can help you avoid unnecessary stress.

✅ Rather than skip testing, “just start” testing by modifying the ideal and going with what is realistic. Here are a few ideas:

  • Fewer interviews
  • Shorter survey
  • Leverage Gen AI (more to come in Tactic #7)
  • Plan ahead: put message testing in your launch plan

When a client was preparing to launch a genetic marker for a rare disease, they approached us to test physician ad concepts and messages. They faced two familiar constraints in biotech launches:

  1. Limited time
  2. A small, hard-to-reach physician population

One more traditional approach might have been to test messages → share feedback with client and creative agency → agency modifies concepts → ideally we test again to optimize. Instead, we compressed the process and reduced the timeline by days, possibly a week. (How great would it be to save a week when getting ready for launch?)

How did we do that?

  • We reduced the number of stakeholder interviews.
  • We prioritized metrics like stopping power, visceral response, clinical credibility
  • Importantly, we invited the agency into the testing process.

Bringing the agency in allowed for agile development. As the interviews progressed, the concepts evolved, and we moved closer and closer to optimal with each next test.

The results were telling, actionable, and valuable even with a small sample. We confirmed a key hypothesis, which added confidence to the commercial strategy. We also revealed confusing language about the biomarker that we easily fixed to avoid encountering post-launch confusion, questions, and delayed product adoption.

The key takeaway: When launching a business or a brand or a campaign, perfect conditions are rare. But even limited testing can uncover powerful insights, reduce risk, and strengthen confidence before your message reaches the market.

If your organization is preparing to launch a new business or brand, connect with us (message me on LinkedIn) or visit https://www.healthmarketexperts.com/ to learn more about how we can help you with messaging and commercial strategy to set your business and brand on a path of success.

Written by a human. This post expands on content I previously wrote as a blog at Catalant and delivered in guest lectures at Rutgers Business School.

Visit https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathan-kay-healthcare/ to connect with Jon on LinkedIn.

Thanking Jarrod Borkat and Rachel Rath for Their Service on the BioHealth Innovation Board

By News

BioHealth Innovation extends its sincere thanks to Jarrod Borkat, Chief Commercial and Strategy Officer at On Demand Pharmaceuticals, and Rachel Rath, Head of JLABS @ Washington DC, for their dedicated service on the Board of Directors.

Throughout their tenure, both leaders brought a steady, thoughtful presence to the board and helped strengthen the organization’s role within the BioHealth Capital Region. Their perspectives, grounded in deep industry experience and regional engagement, supported informed decision-making and reinforced a shared commitment to advancing innovation across the ecosystem.

Jarrod Borkat’s career spans senior commercial, strategy, and partnership roles across the biopharmaceutical sector. His experience building large-scale collaborations among industry, academia, and government brought practical insight to board discussions, particularly around commercialization pathways and cross-sector engagement. His long-standing involvement in the region reflects a consistent belief in collaboration as a foundation for sustainable growth.

During his time with MedImmune and AstraZeneca, Jarrod played a key role in advancing the BioHealth Capital Region (BHCR) brand and strengthening its national profile. He was also a strong advocate for BioHealth Innovation expanding its footprint into Washington, DC, and Virginia, helping foster a more integrated regional ecosystem. In addition, he served on the Board’s Executive Committee, where his strategic perspective supported organizational growth and transition.

Rachel Rath provided a complementary lens shaped by her leadership at one of the region’s most active innovation platforms. Her work evaluating and accelerating early-stage companies, along with prior experience supporting national health security and clinical research initiatives, informed the board’s understanding of emerging technologies and the needs of founders navigating complex development environments.

“Jarrod and Rachel have been exceptional board members and trusted partners,” said Rich Bendis, Founder, President, and CEO of BioHealth Innovation. “Their leadership, insight, and commitment to the BioHealth Capital Region have made a lasting impact. We are grateful for their service and for the time and expertise they so generously shared.”

BioHealth Innovation wishes both leaders continued success and looks forward to their ongoing contributions to the region’s innovation community.

From Can to Should: Reassessing Viability in 2026

By EIR Insights, News

Last year, I wrote a LinkedIn Article titled To be or not to be: Just because you CAN, doesn’t mean you SHOULD.” The point was straightforward. Passion and good science are not enough. They never really were. That post was a reaction to what I was seeing across early-stage biotech and MedTech at the time. The environment has not eased since then. If anything, the bar has moved higher.

The requirements for viability are more stringent today than they were even a year ago. Early-stage capital remains difficult to access, particularly at the seed and Series A stages, unless a company has human proof of concept. Angel investors want de-risking. Most venture funds will not underwrite the earliest technical risk. Government funding used to fill that gap. The uncertainty around the reauthorization of innovation investment programs has made it harder to hit commercially meaningful milestones at exactly the stage when companies need that support most. Until policy catches up, founders are forced to seek private capital that is increasingly selective and unforgiving.

This shifts the question founders need to ask themselves. It is no longer whether an idea is interesting or even whether it addresses an unmet need. The question is whether the idea can survive the current validation threshold. That threshold is no longer defined by enthusiasm or momentum. It is defined by evidence, timing, and a clear path to value creation that stands up to scrutiny.

Commercial realism remains the most common failure point. Founders and CEOs are almost always optimistic about their opportunity, and they should be. If the CEO is not the champion, no one else will be. The problem arises when optimism replaces rigor. Market size is often overstated. Competitive dynamics are underestimated. Pricing and reimbursement assumptions are built on hope rather than data. Real market assessments require primary customer discovery paired with precedent sales data, both top-down and bottom-up. They also require discipline about who the customer is and where adoption will realistically occur.

Differentiation has also changed. Incremental improvements used to matter. Slight changes in dosing or convenience could be enough in some cases, but that still holds only if the market signals that it values those changes. In many therapeutic and digital health categories, that bar has risen. The existence of a standard of care, even an imperfect one, changes everything. Workarounds that are cheaper and good enough are formidable competitors. A fourth- or fifth-line product rarely succeeds just because the total addressable market is significant. Investors are not persuaded by big numbers without a sophisticated explanation of what portion of that market is reachable and why.

Health economics can no longer be an afterthought. Payers are not focused on novelty. They are focused on sustainability. Cost effectiveness, total cost of care, and system-level impact matter early, not late. Clinical development strategies that ignore this reality tend to produce assets that struggle to gain traction even if they reach approval.

Manufacturing and supply chain considerations are now decisive factors in viability. Fully burdened cost modeling should be mandatory, not optional. Many promising concepts fail when exposed to the realities of sourcing, scale-up, tech transfer, and CDMO capacity. Lead times for specialized reagents, limited suppliers, geopolitical pressures, and competition from larger customers all introduce risks that can derail timelines and margins. Profitability estimates that are not grounded in real quotes and realistic assumptions are unreliable. A product that cannot be manufactured profitably at scale is not a product. It is an experiment.

Intellectual property expectations have also hardened. Venture investors continue to favor novel chemical entities with enforceable composition-of-matter claims. Method-of-use claims and simple repurposing strategies remain difficult to defend commercially. Off-label use, generic substitution, and payer resistance erode value quickly. Repurposing can be both capital and clinically efficient, but unless there is a credible way to lock the market through delivery technology, owned chemistry, or a pricing model that holds, it is rarely attractive to institutional capital. The irony is that some of the most efficient paths to patient benefit struggle the most under current investment models.

Clinical adoption risk extends far beyond efficacy. I look at alternatives already in use and ask who they fail and why. I look at early predictors of response and whether patient selection is feasible. I look at whose pain point is being addressed and whether that aligns across providers, patients, payers, and regulators. Evidence requirements vary by stakeholder, and the costs and time required to satisfy them must be modeled honestly. I also look closely at who makes the buying decision and how the product would be sold. Adoption fails as often for psychological and behavioral reasons as it does for scientific ones.

Deciding whether to move forward, pause, or walk away requires discipline. Founders need to evaluate unmet need, solution fit, market opportunity, IP defensibility, validation requirements, development and manufacturing plans, regulatory and reimbursement pathways, financial models, and exit logic together. Weaknesses in any one area can undermine the entire effort. The willingness to stop is not a sign of failure. It is a sign of judgment. In this environment, the threshold for validation is higher across the board, even in areas that remain attractive to pharma and investors.

This is where an experienced, external perspective matters. A short, focused conversation can surface gaps that would otherwise take years and significant capital to discover. Stress-testing assumptions early saves time, money, and energy. Not every idea should become a company. Not every asset belongs in a pipeline. The goal is not to build something at all costs. The goal is to build something that has a real chance of reaching patients and creating value along the way.

Being in the business of innovation means living with uncertainty and learning constantly. It also means making hard calls sooner rather than later. Just because you can still does not mean you should. The difference between the two has never mattered more.

Entrepreneurs in Residence Call: Biohealth Commercialization Leaders with AI and Quantum Experience

By News

BioHealth Innovation is expanding its Entrepreneurs in Residence (EIR) network and is seeking experienced leaders at the intersection of biohealth and advanced technologies, including artificial intelligence and quantum computing.

This call is for seasoned operators with a strong commercialization background. Ideal candidates have taken innovations from concept through market entry, licensing, spinout, or acquisition, and understand the realities of regulatory pathways, customer discovery, fundraising, and scale. Experience working with startups, academic technologies, government labs, or early-stage venture-backed companies is essential. EIRs serve in a part time advisory role with BHI, working flexibly alongside other professional commitments while contributing hands on commercialization expertise.

We are particularly interested in EIRs who can translate AI and quantum capabilities into practical biohealth applications, including drug discovery, diagnostics, clinical research, manufacturing, data analytics, and health system innovation. The role requires comfort working across technical, business, and stakeholder environments.

EIRs work closely with entrepreneurs, researchers, and partners across the BioHealth Capital Region and nationally. Engagements may include advising project teams, supporting partner initiatives, guiding commercialization strategy, and mentoring founders navigating early growth decisions.

This is an opportunity to contribute deep expertise to high-potential biohealth innovations while remaining connected to a collaborative, mission-driven ecosystem.

Interested candidates should contact BHI Founder, President, and CEO, Rich Bendis at rbendis@biohealthinnovation.org, with a summary of their background, commercialization experience, and areas of technical focus.

 

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