PICC's 2025 Israeli FemTech Summit
- Jan 22
- 2 min read
Updated: Jan 26
The Philadelphia-Israel Chamber of Commerce (PICC) ended the year with our Israeli FemTech Summit on December 10 at EisnerAmper in Philadelphia. PICC collaborated with exceptional partners: the BIRD Foundation, New Jersey-Israel Commission, and the Israel Economic Mission to the USA - East Coast. After pitch sessions at Jefferson Health and Penn Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Health System, the Israeli startups were featured at our FemTech reception. We are excited to watch these innovative companies grow: MICA AI Medical FEMSelect SpotitEarly OffRa Health Opmed.ai Pulsenmore Nayara.ai
The companies addressed a range of healthcare issues from:
using AI to better detect breast cancer
optimizing operations for healthcare institutions
detection of cancer in at risk cancer patients
a minimally invasive approach to pelvic organ prolapse
early detection of multiple cancers with one at home test
remote assessment of fetal well-being
We welcomed Nathan Tsror, Economic Minister to North America, who recently assumed his role as Head of the Israel Economic Mission to the USA - East Coast in New York. David Briel represented the PA Governor's office, Pennsylvania Department of Community & Economic Development We joined together with key partners in the ecosystem and presented a panel discussion "Israeli Innovators Explore Philadelphia Partnerships" moderated by Ellen Weber, Robin Hood Ventures sharing advice for the startups on doing business in the US and Philly. Our panelists included an entrepreneur and investor David Baker, Robin Hood Ventures, a global innovator Karina Sotnik, WorldUpstart, and regional partner, Lindsey M. Hover, MCP, The Chamber of Commerce for Greater Philadelphia.
"We’ve initiated discussions with several potential partners across the three states, and the delegation created a great starting point for those relationships," said OffRA Health CEO & Cofounder Chen Ben Dori. "One message came through clearly: preventive oncology and continuous care are no longer theoretical. Health systems recognize the gaps — and are looking for scalable, adoptable solutions. Now."
Thank you to our sponsors, Pennsylvania Department of Community & Economic Development and EisnerAmper.
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