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Viral Super Patch founder says product reaches $200 million in revenue without venture capital

Viral Super Patch founder says product reaches $200 million in revenue without venture capital

Connor McCrorySun, May 31, 2026 at 6:03 AM UTC

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Jay Dhaliwal is the creator of the viral Super Patch -Credit:Instagram (Instagram)

A Canadian tech entrepreneur who watched his mother lose much of her mobility to multiple sclerosis says he has spent the better part of 40 years building a drug-free skin patch he claims can help the brain and body communicate.

Jay Dhaliwal, founder of the wellness firm Super Patch, traces the idea to 1983, when his mother was diagnosed with MS. He says that within two years she went from vibrant to nearly fully disabled, and that the medicines available eased some symptoms but could not reverse her decline.

Dhaliwal, who comes from a computer science background rather than medicine, says he then spent 15 years consulting experts around the world while chasing a single question: whether brain signals could be restored through the skin without drugs or surgery.

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The result, he says, is a wearable patch using a patented "Vibrotactile Trigger Technology" — a micro-encoded textured pattern worn on the skin. The efficacy claims rest on 16 peer-reviewed studies the company itself cites.

"Modern medicine is hijacked by three modalities," Dhaliwal said. "A drug, some kind of electrical stimulation, or surgery. That's it, there's nothing else until this came along."

He frames his approach as communication rather than chemistry.

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"The whole world is chasing AI," he said. "AI this, AI that, what we're harnessing is OI, original intelligence that we're born with, that we're created with. AI might destroy the world, but OI is going to save this world."

The company says it demonstrates the patch to visiting athletes and doctors using simple balance or strength tests, performed with and without it. Dhaliwal says thousands of US doctors recommend the product, that more than 12 NFL teams use it, and that uptake across the NBA, NHL and MLB is growing.

Super Patch says it reached a $200 million annual revenue run rate in 2025 without venture capital, driven largely by word of mouth.

Dhaliwal also makes strong claims about the underlying data.

"In clinical science, you want a p-value of 0.05," he said. "The data we have on our clinicals is 0.001. There is no chance this is a placebo. That is a level of efficacy that isn't even reached by big pharma."

He describes the patch as a "third option" beyond pharmaceuticals and supplements, and says the moment that mattered most came when his mother first used it and felt like herself again.

"It doesn't speak English," he said of the body's nervous system. "It speaks frequency. And if we can send the right frequency through our skin, if Braille works, that means all that matters is what you're writing on the skin."

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Source: “AOL Money”

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