They used to be designed for people. Built with care, tested for ease of use, and created to serve the patients who depend on them every day. Whether at home or in the hospital, these devices felt like they belonged to the user. And they did.
Today, most medical devices prioritize systems over individuals. Not made for patients, but for institutions. Buying one locks users into a cycle of complexity and frustration. Every update adds layers of difficulty without adding value. And if you struggle to use it? Tough. The device doesn’t adapt to you—you’re forced to adapt to it.
For decades, the traditional medical device industry benefited from this approach. With routine indifference to user needs, profits soared on the backs of patients and caregivers bound to tools that lacked empathy, innovation, and simplicity.
Think about your last experience with a medical device. It should have been designed for you, but was it really?
The system still works for institutions, but its grip on patients is slipping. As healthcare moves into the home, people demand devices that empower, not confound. Technology has advanced, and so has our expectation of what it should deliver. Patients and caregivers are tired of being sidelined in a space meant to serve them.
Once, medical devices were intuitive, empowering, and centered around those who used them. We believe it’s time to get back to that.
Introducing Droom, a new line of medical devices designed for people.
Designed for you, not the system.
So far, there are three Droom products:
For too long, the medical device industry has ignored the people it’s supposed to serve. At Droom, we’re leading the way into a new era—one where patients and caregivers come first. This is more than a mission. It’s a movement.
Stay tuned!
Taylor J Petroelje
Founder, Droom Medical Inc.
info@droommedical.com
Sign up to receive updates from us as we grow.