Healthtech

Declining healthtech innovation among medical industry companies in the last three months

Analysis of patent filings shows a shrinking level of healthtech related applications in the industry over the past three months, compared to last year.

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Research and innovation in healthtech in the medical sector has declined in the last year.

The most recent figures show that the number of healthtech related patent applications in the industry stood at 1592 in the three months ending July - down from 1934 over the same period in 2021.

Figures for patent grants related to healthtech followed a similar pattern to filings - shrinking from 983 in the three months ending July 2021 to 756 in the same period in 2022.

The figures are compiled by GlobalData, who track patent filings and grants from official offices around the world. Using textual analysis, as well as official patent classifications, these patents are grouped into key thematic areas, and linked to key companies across various industries.


Healthtech is one of the key areas tracked by GlobalData. It has been identified as being a key disruptive force facing companies in the coming years, and is one of the areas that companies investing resources in now are expected to reap rewards from.


The figures also provide an insight into the largest innovators in the sector.


Johnson & Johnson was the top healthtech innovator in the medical sector in the latest quarter. The company, which has its headquarters in the United States, filed 413 healthtech related patents in the three months ending July. That was down from 504 over the same period in 2021.


It was followed by the Ireland based Medtronic Plc with 162 healthtech patent applications, Switzerland based F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd (146 applications), and the United States based Becton Dickinson and Co (126 applications).

ResMed Inc has recently ramped up R&D in healthtech. It saw growth of 50% in related patent applications in the three months ending July compared to the same period in 2021 - the highest percentage growth out of all companies tracked with more than 10 quarterly patents in the medical sector.

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