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Dalton Shaull

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Dalton Shaull was born in 1994 in Oskaloosa, Iowa and attended Oskaloosa High School. He attended college at the University of Iowa and participated on the 2013 Varsity football team under head coach Kirk Ferentz. In 2013, Mr Shaull was involved in a career-ending motorcycle accident. In 2014, Mr Shaull began his business career as an intern at Stryker Medical and Intuitive. He started his first company, OmniLife, in 2016 with co-founder Eric Pahl.

Athletics Mr Shaull was a graduate of Oskaloosa High School, which had produced several division 1 athletes, including former Iowa Hawkeye All-American and NY Giant, Tyler Sash.

On June 13, 2013 Mr Shaull was involved in a high-speed motorcycle accident that left him with near-fatal injuries, one of which included paralysis of his right arm.

In 2014, Mr Shaull received a nerve auto-graft transplant that restored functionality of his arm which he highlights in several media interviews was the inception for his passion for the organ and tissue donation and transplantation industry.

Business In 2016, Mr Shaull launched HealthTech Solutions, Inc. dba OmniLife and formerly known as ORGANizer out of the John Pappajohn Entrepreneurial Center (JPEC) at the University of Iowa Tippie College of Business. The business was initially focused on mobile organ offers and providing clinical decision support and AI-driven graft survival donor-patient matching algorithm.

In 2017, OmniLife announced that they were expanding from their original organ offering platform to provide communication services across the entire organ procurement and recovery process, which included transplant hospitals, organ procurement organizations, medical couriers, HLA labs, and other key stakeholders.

In 2018, Mr Shaull was nominated and awarded Forbes 30UNDER30 most promising businesses in Healthcare. Additionally, OmniLife was awarded a phase I small business innovation research (SBIR) grant from the NIH. OmniLife completed a 1-year 3-center study and published their findings in the Progress in Transplantation journal in 2018. OmniLife also completed a successful financing round lead by private angel investors.

In 2019, OmniLife was awarded a phase II SBIR grant from the NIH to continue the work and build upon the positive outcomes of their phase I research. The company also announced an expansion of their tools and services for providers managing care for end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients.

In 2020, OmniLife released several new products focused on providing collaborative clinical workflow management to all stakeholders in the allotransplant industry. They expanded communication services into tissue and organs for research and announced several strategic partnerships including their partnership with the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) Starzl Transplant Institute which is a network foundation honorary transplant legend Thomas E. Starzl.


Awards

Forbes 30UNDER30 Healthcare TCU Values and Ventures Competition Winner Rice Business Plan Competition Semi-Finalist Certified Benefit Corporation - Value-based Leadership

References[edit]


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