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Insider UK
Technology
Hannah Finch

Former Rangers footballer gives £400,000 backing to sports medical app

A Scottish firm set to revolutionise sports and event patient care has been given a a major funding boost by a former Rangers player-turned top sports medic.

Prof. Gordon MacKay, 58, a footballer-turned-surgeon, who played in the Rangers reserve team alongside Ally McCoist and Graeme Souness and wife Jackie have invested £400,000 in ScribePro.

It's an innovative medical app platform that records medical interactions in real-time for clinicians working in team sports. Professor MacKay, who has been credited with pioneering sports career-saving surgery, has given his backing to the business, believing it will become a world leader in its field.

ScribePro is using the cash to expand on an international scale.

Founded in April 2018 and commercially launched at the start of 2021, ScribePro was set up to improve the welfare and safety of patients by making their medical information instantaneously accessible to all clinical staff in any location.

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Already, the business has signed up users including medics working with the Scottish FA, FIFA and the SRU, as well as national associations across Europe and in the Middle East. A number of SPFL and SWPL teams have also joined the platform. This month (November), ScribePro has been working with 20 of the 32 Rugby League World Cup teams to enhance the medical care of players competing in the high-profile tournament.

The concept was developed by Jonny Gordon, a Consultant in Emergency Medicine at Glasgow’s Queen Elizabeth University Hospital and the First Team Doctor for the Scotland National Team, and David Lowe, an Academic Consultant in Emergency Medicine and Co-Director of the EmQuire Research.

The pair teamed up with technical healthcare specialists to establish ScribePro after determining the need to bring the rudimentary paper-based systems in place for team managed sports into the 21st century.

Utilising a user-friendly portal that can be accessed on a desktop, tablet or phone alongside a companion app, ScribePro provides a portable digital solution to record clinical interactions between athletes and medical staff. Sports clubs at all levels including senior, development and women’s teams have adopted it, with the records able to be transferred seamlessly across different squads.

ScribePro will soon market its new FirstAid and Event companion apps alongside its flagship Teams system, the first to be introduced to the commercial market.

Mr Gordon, 50, ScribePro chief executive, who has been working with FIFA at the World Cup in Qatar, said: “All too often medical information is stored as paper records, if there are even records at all. We also noticed it was quite common for there to be very little communication between different medical teams, for example club and international sides.

“The platform alleviates major GDPR and player health risks. The software is secure, user-friendly and affordable. As soon as someone who has seen the player and administered treatment enters the information, anyone else in that medical team can see it, instantaneously.”

With the significant six-figure inward investment, ScribePro, which currently has five full-time employees and is growing, will accelerate its market entry and route to internationalisation while furthering its product development and research, with a predicted revenue of £4.5million in 2025.

Professor MacKay, a renowned Consultant Orthopaedic Sports Surgeon who has held roles as the official surgeon for both Celtic and Rangers, the Scottish Rugby Union, Commonwealth Games and Ryder Cup, switched his focus towards medicine after suffering serious ligament damage which brought his playing days to a premature end in 1990.

He’s since saved countless careers of sportsmen and women thanks to his world-leading technique to repair traumatic ligament injuries, adopted by elite surgeons across the globe.

Commenting on his and his wife Jackie’s decision to invest £400,000 into ScribePro, he said: “When I was a footballer, I realised the insecurity of injury and just how devastating it can be. Simple problems can become a serious disability if they’re not addressed or identified at the appropriate time."

“The vision is also very timely - sport is looking for someone to take the lead in this field and provide something that allows medical information to travel with the player, to ensure that continuity. If medics have instant access to that information, it can dramatically improve the outcome for those involved in sport and ScribePro is really going to address this very successfully."

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