Review of 'Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup' on 'Goodreads'
Wellness technology is ascendant in Silicon Valley. Apple’s series 6 watch provides EKG and blood oxygen tests. Because their blood oxygen test is marketed for wellness and not as a medical instrument, it does not require FDA approval. As innocuous as this sounds, the unification of Silicon Valley and medical testing is a cause for alarm.
Theranos, a portmanteau of therapy and diagnose, was Elizabeth Holmes’ Silicon Valley startup for disrupting the lab testing industry with a device that could run hundreds of blood test simultaneously using just a drop of blood pricked from a finger. Holmes delivered presentations that gained Theranos billions of dollars in venture capital money and the support of Henry Kissinger, James Mattis, and Rupert Murdoch. She crafted her image and personality to fit the American innovator architype. To remind people of Steve Jobs, she wore a black turtleneck sweater every day to her office and to presentations.
If Holmes’ idea worked, it would have revolutionized the lab testing industry. However, Holmes wasn’t interested in the slow, methodical work of engineering a miniaturized lab testing machine. She followed Silicon Valley’s Vaporware tradition of overpromising and underdelivering. When software and computer hardware firms engage in sales lies, no one gets hurt. When biotech companies disrupting the lab testing industry do this, healthy people pay for expensive and unnecessary tests and people with treatable illnesses are told they are healthy. People go broke or die when blood testing is inaccurate.
Elizabeth Holmes faces 2 counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and 9 counts of wire fraud, 20 years in prison, and a 250,000-dollar fine.
Americans are easily fooled by hucksters who overpromise and underdeliver. As American citizens, we need to require supporting data and follow-through when people make extraordinary claims. When we don’t think critically, we invite grifters to scam us.
John Carreyrou’s reporting on Theranos and Elizabeth Holmes brought him in conflict with the threats, lawyers, and private investigators purchased with billions in venture capital. His dedication to the truth and victims of Theranos’ inaccurate tests is a shining example of why we need an independent press. If you start reading Bad Blood, you won’t be able to put it down : slpl.bibliocommons.com/item/show/1415732116
