What You Should Know

Surgical computer vision pioneer Uncovr has emerged from stealth with a $7M seed funding round led by Index Ventures.The investment features strategic backing from Seedcamp, Frst, No Label Ventures, and Entrepreneurs First, alongside notable healthcare angels including Color Health CEO Othman Laraki and Digital Surgery founder Jean Nehme.Founded by Ines Iraki, Johann Diep, and renowned surgeon Professor Eric Vibert, the platform targets a massive operational bottleneck: surgeons manually reconstructing operative notes from memory hours after a procedure.Uncovr’s real-world data tracking reveals that missed billable steps occur in 16% of procedures, causing a roughly 10% structural leakage gap that human review routinely fails to catch.The startup has built an initial deployment pipeline encompassing more than 400 operating rooms across the United States and Europe, analyzing thousands of hours of surgical and endoscopic video.

The intraoperative and surgical documentation landscape inside Western health systems is operating under an unsustainable paradigm. Over the past decade, billions of dollars have been funneled into modernizing operating rooms with state-of-the-art robotic platforms, high-definition laparoscopes, and advanced endoscopic visualization systems. Yet, despite the fact that millions of minimally invasive procedures are filmed in full on camera every single day, the official medical record of the surgery remains fundamentally detached from this digital ground truth.

Once a grueling multi-hour operation concludes, surgeons are routinely forced to reconstruct the complex anatomical steps, instrument interactions, and unexpected complications entirely from memory. These handwritten or dictated operative notes—often completed hours later outside the active flow of care—serve as the definitive clinical and legal record of the procedure, as well as the primary evidentiary source driving hospital reimbursement and compliance auditing.

When high-stakes documentation relies on human recollection under stress, data loss is inevitable. Multi-institutional tracking confirms that the vast majority of standard operative reports omit crucial clinical information, a deficit directly linked to higher rates of un-tracked surgical complications, readmission liabilities, and severe revenue leakage. For enterprise health systems, this structural disconnect results in millions in lost billing revenue and elevated malpractice vulnerabilities.

To eliminate this data gap and establish an unassailable system of record for the operating room, surgical computer vision pioneer Uncovr has emerged from stealth with a $7M seed funding round. Led by premier venture firm Index Ventures, with major participation from Seedcamp, Frst, No Label Ventures, and Entrepreneurs First, the capitalization positions the startup to scale its real-time surgical intelligence platform across elite hospital networks globally.

Activating the “Eye” in the Operating Room: Real-Time Computer Vision

Founded by healthcare operations executive Ines Iraki, computer vision expert Johann Diep (who previously engineered autonomous tracking systems for the European Space Agency and ETH Zurich), and prominent surgical specialist Professor Eric Vibert, Uncovr directly addresses the documentation bottleneck by turning real-time surgical video into structured clinical records.

Rather than functioning as a passive recording archive or a retrospective dictation tool, Uncovr builds directly “on top of the eye” of the surgeon. The platform’s proprietary computer vision models ingest the live visual feed during laparoscopic, robotic, or endoscopic procedures, automatically identifying every instrument change, anatomical dissection, and clinical decision as it occurs.

Before the surgeon even leaves the operating room, Uncovr translates this intraoperative workflow data into a highly compliant draft operative report and generates precise procedural and billing code recommendations. To maintain clinical safety and institutional trust, the platform enforces a strict human-in-the-loop architecture: the attending surgeon retains absolute oversight, reviewing and signing off on every automated document before it is submitted to the electronic health record (EHR).

“Surgeons should not have to spend their time reconstructing from memory what a camera has already captured and becoming medical coders,” stated Ines Iraki, co-founder and CEO of Uncovr. “The bigger opportunity is what comes after. Every robotic and minimally invasive procedure already generates a rich record of expert decision-making, technique, and judgment. We believe this will become one of the foundational datasets of modern medicine.”

Recovering the $800-Per-Case Revenue Leakage 

The financial and operational metrics surrounding Uncovr’s early deployments reveal an immediate Return on Investment (ROI) for margin-strained hospital executives. In a localized analysis of deployed clinical cases, Uncovr’s tracking documented that missed billable steps occurred in 16% of standard procedures. This systemic omission drove a roughly 10% structural reimbursement gap—amounting to an average of $800 in uncaptured, legitimate revenue per surgical case—that traditional human auditing and retrospective coding teams had completely failed to isolate.

This immediate financial impact has generated an exceptional commercial pipeline. Backed by marquee angel investors including Digital Surgery founder Jean Nehme and Color Health CEO Othman Laraki, Uncovr has already deployed its software across leading health systems in the United States and Europe. The company’s immediate deployment roadmap encompasses more than 400 operating rooms, backed by thousands of hours of validated surgical video data. The fresh seed capital will be explicitly deployed to fund frontier AI engineering talent, deepen model accuracy across diverse surgical specialties, and accelerate integration with dominant enterprise EHR providers.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *