Omada Health’s IPO filing kicked off the week’s news. The chronic condition care management company is the second with a major IPO this year, stirring a dormant healthcare market. There aren’t a lot of offering details in the 9 May SEC Form S-1 registration and preliminary prospectus, but the IPO will launch on Nasdaq Global Markets under the symbol OMDA. There is no disclosure of timing, number of shares to be offered, or pricing. Their prior funding since 2011 is over $528 million through a Series E and debt financing, with lead investors including Andreessen Horowitz, Norwest Venture Partners, Wellington Management, New Enterprise Associates, and Founder Collective (Crunchbase).
Omada’s focus on ‘bending the disease’ curve via a ‘between-visit care model’ for diabetes, obesity, hypertension, and MSK patients has met with success. With a listing of 2,000+ customers and over 679,000 total members enrolled in one or more programs, their 2024 revenue grew 38% from $122.8 million to $169.8 million in 2023, with Q1 2025 by 57% to $55.0 million from 2024’s $35.1 million. Revenue does not mean profit, with net losses of $67.5 million in 2024 and $47.1 million in 2023, with $9.4 million in losses during Q1 2025 reduced from $19 million in Q1 2024. CNBC, Mobihealthnews, FierceHealthcare
Larger and MSK-focused competitor Hinge Health announced its own IPO back in mid-March [TTA 14 Mar] via a SEC S-1 filing and preliminary prospectus, but sent out word that it was postponing by April [TTA 8 April]. With markets doing much better, it’s anticipated that their debut on the NYSE will be this summer. Their funders which have invested over $826 million since 2012 are undoubtedly eager for ROI.
The Redesign Health-UPMC Enterprises partnership launches Glimmer Health. The new company supports primary care physicians to manage their patients’ chronic pain. Chronic pain affects 25% of, or 70 million, US adults. It addresses the lack of resources that primary care practices generally lack to manage the chronic pain of their patients. The Glimmer Health platform integrates advanced medical expertise, behavioral health support, and seamless care coordination via specialized nurse-practitioners, care managers, and social workers to coordinate care plans and guide patients. The company grows out of UPMC’s pain clinics and 12 years of experience in comprehensive assessment and multimodal treatment approaches. Ajay Wasan, M.D., M.Sc., professor of anesthesiology and psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh and vice chair for pain medicine at Pitt and UPMC, who leads the clinics, is now medical director of Glimmer Health. CEO is Alissa Meade, previously CEO of Together Senior Health, sold last year to Linus Health according to her LinkedIn profile. UPMC release
“Delete Your 23andMe Data!” say Oklahoma’s and Pennsylvania’s Attorneys General. Oklahoma’s AG Gentner Drummond finally got the news (via the wind whistling down the plains?) along with Pennsylvania’s AG Dave Sunday that 23andMe went bankrupt in March and it, or parts, are up for sale. The two AGs advise citizens of their respective states to delete their data, instruct 23andMe to destroy their test sample, and revoke research consent for their data. Well, the rush is over at least…it’s better late than never. The instructions are clear, though their efficacy with 23andMe in actually removing it, including survey data, versus following FTC policies on securing the data, is in reasonable doubt [TTA 3 April]. After all, user genetic data and information is all that 23andMe has to sell. Oklahoma AG’s release, The Oklahoman, Levittown (PA) Now
Alphabet/Google’s Verily health data/AI unit to build a Parkinson’s molecular research dataset. With a $14.7 million grant from the Michael J. Fox Foundation (MJFF), Verily will be building what they term is a comprehensive molecular dataset to advance Parkinson’s disease research. The dataset is based on data previously collected as part of the Personalized Parkinson’s Project (PPP), a collaboration with the Radboud University Medical Center, in a two-year longitudinal study of 520 people with Parkinson’s. It included detailed clinical histories, data from the Verily Study Watch, imaging data, and matched biospecimens such as blood and cerebrospinal fluid. It will be made publicly available to researchers through Verily’s Workbench solution. According to Verily’s release, the molecular data includes:
- A comprehensive, high-resolution immunogenomic data resource to fuel research on the immune system’s association with Parkinson’s disease pathogenesis.
- Whole genome sequences for those that have consented to enable discovery of genetic factors associated with different aspects of Parkinson’s disease.
- Metabolomic and alpha-Synuclein data, which have shown promise for assessing and predicting disease activity and stages.
No deadline was disclosed. Mobihealthnews
How much does it cost to protect healthcare corporate executives? Executive security is one of those hidden costs that is not always easy to determine. Some receive it, others do not, at least for public consumption or paid for by the company.
- UnitedHealth Group in 2024 totaled $1.7 million in security costs. The largest cost was for executive protection for Optum CEO Heather Cianfrocco, $926,989. CEO Andrew Witty’s security costs, not included in the $1.7 million, totaled $150,951. He was also required to use the company’s corporate aircraft for business travel (cost not itemized) and was encouraged to do so for personal travel, should the plane be available. Witty did not use it for the latter in 2024. Brian Thompson unfortunately received no security.
- CVS Health did not itemize direct security costs for CEO David Joyner in 2024. His disclosed expenses from October on were $15,787 on personal use of the company plane; $7,713 for the use of a company car and driver; and $82,603 on home security. Personal travel expenses using company resources must be reimbursed over $250,000 (!). Previous CEO Karen Lynch racked up expenses of $242,051 on personal aircraft use; $95,199 on the use of a company car and driver; and $44,645 on personal protection. Security totaling $56,610 was extended to her for six months after she was replaced by David Joyner.
- Cigna’s CEO David Cordani is required to use the company aircraft for business and personal travel. The latter totaled $231,008 in 2024. Spending for executive protection was not disclosed. Cigna does not consider security a perquisite for executive compensation purposes. There is no further information about executive security.
- Elevance Health lists executive security as “other perquisites” and apparently it is modest. For CEO Gail Boudreaux, they spent $93,387 and for Peter Haytaian, president of Elevance’s Carelon unit, $36,213. Boudreaux also was permitted limited use of corporate aircraft for up to 50 hours of personal flight time each year not to exceed a total of $199,000 in costs.
- Centene Corporation discloses few costs around executive security, only providing it to CEO Sarah London until December 2024. Her 2024 security totaled $69,133. Interestingly, CFO Drew Asher received $98,358 in protection services and COO Susan Smith $33,244. London also had $143,854 in expenses for personal aircraft usage. Centene policy is that the aircraft is available for security reasons but did not disclose whether London or other executives were required to use the plane for business use.
- Finally, Humana’s only disclosures around security was for the perquisite of personal corporate plane usage, and it’s limited. CEO Jim Rechtin incurred $36,166, with former CEO Bruce Broussard spending $37,434 .
FierceHealthcare’s Paige Minemeyer did the dig.
Most Recent Comments