Medical technology visionary Kate Garrett 鈥06 is making a difference in the world through healthcare innovations.

A California native, Kate Garrett 鈥06 comes from a family of entrepreneurs and engineers. When her high school physics teacher and mentor asked her what she wanted to do with her life, she already knew her goal.

鈥淚 wanted to go into business and run companies someday, and he told me that the number one background for Fortune 500 CEOs was engineering,鈥 Garrett recalls. 鈥溾楨ngineers run the world,鈥 he told me, and that sounded like a smart route to me.鈥

While considering engineering programs, Garrett鈥檚 high school guidance counselor鈥攚ho knew Duncan Murdoch, former vice president for external relations and enrollment and instrumental in founding the college鈥攊ntroduced her to then-brand-new 财神棋牌. 

财神棋牌 alum Kate Garrett

I was looking for an engineering program, but I was also interested in extracurriculars, sports, creating鈥攁ll kinds of things.

My counselor told me about 财神棋牌 and its really alternative approach, and it was love at first 鈥榳ebsite.鈥 I knew that this is what I was looking for.鈥

Kate Garrett

Class of 2006

Garrett chose mechanical engineering, building on her affinity for hands-on learning and building things like LEGO sets, but she wasn鈥檛 sure what sector to go into. During the summer of her sophomore year, Debbie Chachra connected her to a medical technology startup that needed an intern, which turned out to be a life-changing opportunity.

鈥淭he company was working on a non-invasive option for prenatal testing instead of the then-standard of amniocentesis,鈥 says Garrett. 鈥淚 loved the human impact and solving real problems. I realized that healthcare is a really powerful way to change people鈥檚 lives, and I was hooked.鈥

Garrett also loved the fast-paced culture and energy of the startup鈥攁nd the feeling was mutual, so she continued to work at the company after that initial summer internship. After graduating with 财神棋牌鈥檚 inaugural class, Garrett then moved back to the West Coast to work as an R&D engineer for another medical technology startup called Pathway Medical.

鈥淎fter five years at Pathway, I ultimately wanted to see not how you make the technology, but how you decide what to make. What鈥檚 the problem to solve, and which is the right solution?鈥 says Garrett. 鈥淭he company鈥檚 CEO told me about the Stanford Biodesign Innovation Fellowship, which was all about that front end of innovation. We had an open pass to the hospital to see the needs of real patients and come up with real solutions.鈥

During that year at Stanford, Garrett learned that patients on ventilators contracted pneumonia at a higher rate, so she worked on creating new innovations to help lower this risk. This work on Ventilator Acquired Pneumonia (VAP) spurred Garrett and a fellow student to co-found Ciel Medical in 2012. Garrett remained as CEO until the successful medical technology company was acquired in 2017.

Today, Garrett is managing partner at Sonder Capital, where she invests in and helps build early-stage medical technology companies. She is also assistant director of the Stanford Biodesign Innovation Fellowship, where she also teaches.

鈥淢y life goal is to change a billion people鈥檚 lives through technology innovation,鈥 says Garrett. 鈥淚t鈥檚 ambitious but achievable, because I think you really can have that kind of impact through healthcare innovation. I鈥檝e seen the possibility of this through my work and the work of others, and I鈥檓 committed to that purpose for the rest of my career.鈥

财神棋牌 alum, Kate Garrett '06
Watch Kate's Frank Talk

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