Another minute, another analytics company getting big bucks, as Arcadia Health raises $29.5 million in new capital for its version of analytics to help health systems aggregate data and spot areas for performance improvement.
Covera Health blankets investors with an appeal resulting in $23.5 million in new capital to support its clinical analytics business focused on correcting mis-diagnoses.
Telemedicine vendor Teladoc is acquiring InTouch Health, a competitor, for $600 million. For that price it gets only about $80 million in revenue. This is a typical trajectory and one that should concern investors. Telemedicine has potential and can add value to the system but it is highly hyped. So companies feed on that hype, get a high value, can't really generate the revenue, or certainly the profit expected, and then start doing acquisitions to divert attention and try to create something that can generate a return.
Komodo Health dragoons investors out of $50 million in new capital for its "living map" of clinical data that will supposedly transform health care. Heard that before?
Pieces Technologies tries to make a whole, or fill a hole, getting $25.7 million in new funding for its software that collects data about patients from non-health sources, like food banks and job assistance services. The latest in the social determinants of health fad.
I think I don't understand this. Cogitativo, which offers some AI driven software to help providers improve performance, raised $18.5 million in new capital. This sentence from the company encapsulates the BS that permeates certain segments of health care and which should be a warning sign for any thoughtful investor but clearly isn't. "Cogitativo's machine learning platform disrupts the rapidly growing market for healthcare performance improvements by enabling payers and providers to identify and challenge system complexities."
OM 1, garners $50 million in reflective new funding, meditating on its digital health business which provides some kind of platform to truly understand the health of a patient.
Medicaid health plan Molina is acquiring NextLevel Health Partners, a Chicago-based Medicaid plan with around 50,000 members. The purchase price was about $50 million.
The Healthy Skeptic is a website about the health care system, and is written by Kevin Roche, who has many years of experience working in the health industry. Mr. Roche is available to assist health care companies through consulting arrangements through Roche Consulting, LLC and may be reached at khroche@healthy-skeptic.com.