![]() ![]() Singapore’s Bot MD raised $5 million for its clinical decision support chatbot for physicians.Ī similar company, HealthTensor, announced it had also raised $5 million for its AI-powered clinical decision support software. India-based InnerHour raised $5.2 million for its virtual mental health care offering. Telemedico is mostly B2B and its services include appointment booking for in-person visits and blood draws too. Poland-based Telemedico raised $6.6 million for its virtual visits offering. * BlinkTBI, a medical device company that wants to improve the detection and management of neurological disease via non-invasive collection of data from the eyes, raised another $3 million to bump its latest raise to $6 million. ![]() Bold aims to partner with Medicare Advantage plans and other risk-bearing entities to keep the offering free to end-users. The company plans to make its virtual exercise programs free to seniors in an effort to prevent falls and the onset of chronic conditions. Garner Health, which incentivizes employees to choose doctors its platforms rate as higher quality and lower cost, raised a $12.5 million Series A.īangalore, India-based Phable raised a $12 million Series A for its chronic conditions-focused virtual care offerings, which include virtual visits with physicians, connected health device data collection, and online stores stocked with medical supplies.īold raised a $7 million Series A for its digital health and wellness programs for seniors. The company is focused on “increasing access to gender-affirming care, medication, and products for the trans community.” Plume, a health tech company built for the transgender community, raised a $14 million Series A. Investors in the round include big-name VC General Catalyst and the world’s largest manufacturer of toilet seats, Bemis Manufacturing Company. This one is fascinating: Casana, formerly known as Heart Health Intelligence, raised a $14 million Series A for its first product, The Heart Seat, which “is a cloud-connected, self-contained toilet seat-based cardiovascular monitoring system.” Casana plans to submit its toilet seat to the FDA soon. Those conversations are then ingested into Infinitus’s platform to parse them for relevant information that is input into the right fields to trigger whatever actions need to happen as a result of the calls.” TechCrunch explained it well: “Infinitus uses ‘voice RPA’ to become the machine-generated voice that makes calls from, say, healthcare providers or pharmacies to insurance companies to go through a series of questions (directed at humans at the other end) that typically need to be answered before payments are authorized and other procedures can take place. Infinitus, which is using voice robotic process automation (RPA) to make it easier for various healthcare entities to authorize payments and other procedures, raised a $21.4 million Series A. CrunchbaseįOLX Health, a virtual care provider “designed by and for the medical needs of the LGBTQIA+ community,” raised a $25 million round. This is surprisingly quick - FOLX just announced its $4.4 million seed round in December. Alma offers a member directory, client-matching service, scheduling and billing functions to make offering virtual mental health services easier. Siteīengaluru, India-based MediBuddy raised a $40 million Series B for its virtual visits, pharmacy delivery, and lab test appointment booking site.Īlma, a membership-based network for mental health providers, raised a $28 million Series B. Capital Rx, a small PBM that touts its “cloud-native” platform as its differentiator, partnered with Wal-Mart back in July. It turns out the full amount was a $50 million Series B. In Issue 010 of E&O Mondays, I reported on Capital Rx‘s $32 million raised before the company made the announcement. ![]() As always, the raises listed below that I didn’t see reported anywhere else have a * next to them to indicate this news is first in Exits & Outcomes. Still, I ended up finding 26 funding deals this week. Wow, this is the first week in a while where there was no financing deal north of $100 million. Why not become a paying subscriber today? Here’s where to click –> right over here. The long-awaited answer to last week’s trivia question is also below along with the three sharp-as-a-tack E&O readers who answered correctly.I found around $250 million in (announced and unannounced) health tech funding deals (equity and debt). ![]() Welcome back to E&O Mondays, the free newsletter from Exits & Outcomes that features the world’s most complete weekly health tech funding round-up. ![]()
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