(Reuters) - The founder of a medical device company has been charged with leading a scheme to create and sell a completely non-functional plastic implant purporting to treat chronic pain, resulting in ...
Laura Perryman, former CEO of neurostimulation device maker Stimwave, was arrested in Florida on Thursday after being accused of running a yearslong scheme to defraud insurers. Perryman has been ...
The pitch from Stimwave, a medical device maker, was alluring. As a startup tackling chronic pain with nerve-stimulating devices, it promised to release patients from the stranglehold of addictive ...
But, the DOJ alleges that the devices were plastic and didn't do anything. The company made millions of dollars off the devices, and its CEO is being charged with fraud. People with chronic pain were ...
Stimwave’s ex-CEO Laura Perryman has been hit with additional fraud charges for the role she played in allegedly defrauding the government after it was unveiled that the company’s white receiver was ...
What started as a company working the system by implanting a jumble of plastic into patients to score a lucrative payout, has finally turned to the system working, resulting in the conviction of ...
SARASOTA, Fla. — Dr. Amitabh Goel says the typical spinal cord stimulator has a battery implanted with it. Stimwave, he says, is different. "We were the first people to use it in Sarasota and the ...
The new software enables patients to fine-tune the power level and modify programs that were pre-programmed by their clinician to control pain. The Food and Drug Administration has cleared the ...
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