News roundup 23 Oct: views on a CVS breakup and CEO replacement, Amwell’s interesting new CFO, CopilotIQ/Biofourmis merge, raises by HealthEx, Counsel Health, Oshi Health

How CVS Health grew into a juggernaut…and why it may pull back to survive. October kicked off with the bombshell [TTA 1 Oct] that CVS Health was considering a breakup into at least two units. Based on Reuters’ insider information, CVS was considering separating their Aetna health plan side from their retail operations. Up in the air was where the now problematic pharmacy benefits management (PBM) units would reside. CVS’ revenue and profitability crunch is biting hard, with Glenview Capital Management and other investors tiring of declining share value (-25% YTD).

Last week’s bombshell was the immediate (17 October) replacement of CEO Karen Lynch with CVS Caremark’s (PBM) president, David Joyner. Lynch, one of the US’ most powerful top female CEOs, took the helm after Larry Merlo’s February 2021 retirement. She had been Aetna head and with the company a total of 12 years, including the pandemic. In August, trying to stave off a two-headed decline that has hit both health plans and retailers, she ousted Aetna’s president Brian Kane and took over direct control. It didn’t take long for this to be viewed as not working. Joyner is a CVS Health ‘lifer’, having started with Aetna as a rep close to 40 years ago, then with an independent Caremark and rising through the ranks. His tenure is starting at a low point with the medical loss ratio (MLR) topping 95%, medical costs soaring, MA ratings cratering, competition from other PBMs, Amazon, and Mark Cuban Cost Plus, plus Federal scrutiny of PBMs on insulin pricing. This is causing a reset on their FY financial guidance which won’t be revealed until early November. FierceHealthcare

MedCityNews did a smart analysis on this, going back in time to 2018 when CVS laid out $70 billion for Aetna. Last year, CVS, in pursuit of integration/expansion goals laid out by top management, acquired Signify Health (home health) and then Oak Street Health (OSH) primary care practices for a combined $18-19 billion. The experts they consulted largely look on a breakup/spinoff as a short term fix, though CVS is right now, to quote Dr. Robert Pearl of Stanford, FTA: “They’re sitting in the place where all the headwinds are.” Will they stick it out or will their investors like Glenview, facing their own headwinds, go for the short term solution?

Over at Oscar Health, their CEO Mark Bertolini, engineer of the Aetna/CVS deal and later ousted from the CVS board, must be smiling as Oscar is Back In Black.

Amwell, which is facing headwinds of hurricane force, named a new CFO. Mark Hirschhorn joins from his most recent spot as CEO of TapestryHealth, a post-acute care telemedicine provider. He is replacing Robert Shepardson, who stated last week he would resign effective Friday 11 October.

Hirschhorn was formerly with Teladoc, from which he resigned in 2018 under reports of insider trading and on top of it, an inappropriate relationship with a subordinate [TTA 20 Dec 2018]. He then was president/COO for two years at cracked SPAC Talkspace, from which he resigned after an internal review regarding his behavior at an offsite company event. Talkspace and Amwell discussed a merger back in the palmy days of 2022 [TTA 22 June 22] which never happened.

Hirschhorn’s last company, TapestryHealth, announced their new CEO effective a little over a month ago on 16 September, with Craig Anderson joining from UnitedHealth Group [TapestryHealth release]. In their release, Hirschhorn was described as pursuing other opportunities with Sopris Venture Capital. Fintel does not list Sopris as an investor or shareholder in Amwell, but this information could be outdated.

This Editor will restrain herself from further comment and wishes the best for Amwell. Healthcare Dive

Two home healthcare-focused companies, CopilotIQ and Biofourmis, announced their merger at HLTH this past Monday. CopilotIQ’s focus has been on in-home delivery of connected care including RPM and nursing for chronic conditions through an AI-assisted software platform, while Biofourmis’ system and market has concentrated more on health systems, payers, and pharmaceutical companies for in-home delivery of complex care. The combined company will be headed by CopilotIQ’s CEO David Koretz. Merger transitions and costs were not disclosed. Investors in both companies–General Atlantic, Openspace Ventures, and Bessemer Venture Partners–are listed as investing into the combined business. Release 

What’s interesting is that CopilotIQ is a relatively small company with only two funding rounds listed on Crunchbase. Biofourmis, at one point, was a unicorn with $464 million in 10 rounds of funding up to a Series D. Yet the company will be headed by the smaller company’s CEO. This sounds like a marriage arranged, as nowadays many are, by the funders. Meanwhile, Biofourmis’ former CEO and one of their founders, Kuldeep Singh Rajput, has founded a health tech company based in Singapore that is focused on generative AI. OutcomesAI is using a LMM (large multi-modal model) called Glia to work with SingHealth for clinical companion AI. Mobihealthnews

A quick rundown on fundings touted at HLTH:

HealthEx, a company with a tech model for healthcare organizations to manage data around patient preferences and consent, announced a $14 million seed/Series A funding. It was “hatched”, according to the release, by General Catalyst. 

Counsel Health scored $11 million in Series A funding. Counsel provides on-demand, high-quality, personalized medical advice from expert physicians within minutes. It apparently is a blend of an advice, counseling, and telehealth model. Counsel currently claims to serve tens of thousands of patients through its health plan and provider partnerships in California, New York, Massachusetts, Florida, and Texas. Funding will be used for platform development and nationwide expansion..The round was led by Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) Bio + Health, with participation from Asymmetric Capital Partners, Floodgate Fund and Pear VC. Release

Oshi Health won this week’s Big Raise with a $60 million Series C. Oshi is a virtual-first gastrointestinal care clinic integrating evidence-based medical care and behavioral health support for patients with Crohn’s Disease, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and ulcerative colitis. Funding was led by Oak HC/FT with existing investors CVS Health Ventures, Flare Capital Partners, Takeda Digital Ventures, Bessemer Venture Partners, and First Cressey Ventures. Mobihealthnews, Release

Categories: Latest News and Opinion.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *