Creator: Patrick Connole
z-PAX LIVE! 2025 Innovation Conference Heads to Nashville
z-PAX LIVE!, presented by Zimmet Healthcare, brings its innovation conference to Nashville from Dec. 7-9, opening the door for operators, investors, and developers to discuss the future of post-acute care technology, creating a moment in time when innovators begin to shape it.
Registration remains open at z-PAX Live .
“z-PAX LIVE! is where operators, investors, and developers come together to talk about the future of post-acute technology, share perspectives, and spark the ideas that will ultimately shape the sector. It’s a place to compare real-world experiences and begin building the solutions our industry has been waiting for,” said Moshe Scheinberg, CMO of Zimmet Healthcare Services group and the z-PAX Post -Acute eXchange.
Panels to Trigger Innovation
The event includes an operator panel, featuring insights from Ben Kurland, CEO, Allaire; Tim Fields, CEO, Ignite Medical Resorts; and Mordy Perlow, COO, AristaCare. The innovators will dive into how leaders choose software, what they actually look for from vendors, and how to avoid the data fatigue that causes many teams to struggle.
Another session tackles one of the biggest questions for founders and investors alike: How do you scale and eventually exit in the SNF tech market? A panel of PE, legal, and financial experts will cover market sizing, valuations, IP considerations, staffing, funding stages, and what makes a venture truly investable in this sector.
On the software side, z-PAX LIVE! will highlight the people actually building the products and probe what it really takes to break into a regulated, operator-driven ecosystem. These sessions offer a ground-level view into the challenges of interoperability, the realities of implementation, and the lessons learned from teams pushing innovation forward.
“We’re excited to bring this community together and create a space where real progress happens. Where conversations turn into collaboration, and collaboration turns into the future of post-acute care technology,” Scheinberg said.
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