Senior Accounting Major in the Running to Become
Entrepreneur Magazine’s
College
Entrepreneur of 2010
When senior accounting major Greg Waldstreicher entered
Entrepreneur Magazine’s
College Entrepreneur of 2010 contest at the suggestion of a University of Maryland
alum, he didn’t tell his family or friends. Other than his business partner Gideon
Platt, a senior at NYU, he didn’t share his decision to enter with anyone, because
the chances of becoming a finalist seemed slim.
But early this summer, 20-year-old Waldstreicher found out he was selected out
of 1,000 entries as a Top 10 Finalist. He was asked to create a video about his
entrepreneurial idea, and from there was selected as a Top Five Finalist. Now, it
is up to a public
vote to decide which of those five entrepreneurs should be the
College Entrepreneur of 2010.
In addition to being a Smith School student, Waldstreicher is also part of the
Hinman CEOs program at the university. Hinman CEOs is a living-learning program
designed to place entrepreneurially-minded students from all disciplines into a
single community. With their guidance and funding, Waldstreicher was able to create
his company, DoseSpot, and his pitch to Entrepreneur Magazine a reality.
DoseSpot, which was founded in 2009, is an e-prescription system that allows
medical doctors to connect directly with a patient’s pharmacy. Waldstreicher said
he credits his father, who is a medical doctor, as the inspiration behind DoseSpot.
His father knew about the kinks in the e-prescribing system and shared the complaints
with his son.
“With health care reform, a big push is to create electronic medical records,”
Waldstreicher said. “Included in the health care package is $44,000 per doctor to
adopt these electronic medical records. So, the government is basically saying,
‘We’ll pay for you to do this because that is how important it is to us.’”
An element of electronic records, in addition to keeping track of patient visits,
labs and X-rays, is prescriptions, Waldstreicher explained. Doctors write billions
of prescriptions each year. To fill a prescription under the old system, doctors
would call the pharmacy and leave a message, fax in a paper prescription or just
give the prescription to the patient.
“The patient has to drive over to the pharmacy, drive home, do errands, come
back. Their prescription may be ready, it may not be,” Waldstreicher said about
the inefficient system. “And there were also the factors of illegible handwriting
and human error contributing to the inefficient system. We decided there had to
be a way to make writing prescriptions more efficient. The handwriting wasn’t working,
the faxing wasn’t working. The calls to the pharmacy weren’t working.”
According to Waldstreicher, a significant amount of a physician’s staff’s time
is spent dealing with pharmacies: “The pharmacy will call the doctor because they
can’t read what he wrote. Then the staff has to find the doctor and the doctor has
to call the pharmacy all over again. It is just so much wasted time and cost and
effort and energy. So we said, ‘We have to be able to do something here.’”
Waldstreicher and Platt see DoseSpot as the solution to those problems. With
DoseSpot, doctors can log in at their own computers and pick from an integrated
drug system database which prescription needs to go to which patient.
“It’s not freehand typing,” Waldstreicher explained. “For example, if they are
looking for Nexium®, they type in ‘N’-‘E’-‘X’ and all of the variations of medicine
starting with those letters will come up. As soon as the doctor selects Nexium®,
the available dosage will appear.”
That is important because another common problem with the old system along with
illegible handwriting is accidental errors in the dosage prescribed. So, a busy
doctor might prescribe 125 mg of a drug when the drug only comes in 100 mg or 150
mg pills. With DoseSpot, only the existing and available dosages available for selection,
so there is less room for human error, Waldstreicher said.
He also explained that DoseSpot is very quick and easy for busy doctors to use,
using the motto of “Click, click, prescribe,” to explain to potential clients the
ease at which the application can be used.
“’Click’ meaning finding the drug and clicking on it. The second ‘click’ is finding
the dosage and clicking on it. And ‘prescribe’ is just type in directions you want,
and then it is done,” Waldstreicher said. “It’s just that easy. Our company really
strives for great customer service and great flexibility.”
The idea of electronic prescriptions is not new; DoseSpot is just a new and smoother
process for e-prescribing. For medical software companies that already have doctors
using their practice management systems or their electronic medical records systems,
but whose systems don’t have the e-prescribing component to them, DoseSpot is able
to be integrated into their existing system. Then, their doctors can use the e-prescribing
without even knowing it’s coming from DoseSpot.
And DoseSpot is certified by Surescripts, the nation’s largest network for electronic
prescriptions. Surescripts has created the whole infrastructure for sending e-prescriptions
back and forth. The certification is expensive, time consuming and the waitlist
can be months, if not years, long, Waldstreicher said.
“Having a Surescripts certification gives DoseSpot a large advantage over companies
still waiting to be certified. That is our pitch to our medical software companies,”
he said. “You don’t need to reinvent the wheel. We’ve already done it and we’ve
already been certified for doing it. Let’s just hook our application into yours
and you save all the time on the waitlist and a lot of cost, rather than developing
it yourself.”
Waldstreicher said that he is really enjoying running DoseSpot and that as a
Smith School student as well as a Hinman CEOs, he is receiving great support from
people at the University of Maryland, College Park: “This has been really cool and
unbelievable. Between Hinman CEOs, Mtech and the Smith School, and everyone else
who has gotten behind me, family and friends, it’s been so much fun.”
Waldstreicher has already won the UM Business Plan Competition for undergraduates
and hopes DoseSpot will lead him to another victory in the College Entrepreneur
of 2010 contest.
Vote for Greg Waldstreicher and his company, DoseSpot.
Voting for the College Entrepreneur of 2010 contest ends on September 10.