News roundup: Owlet expands to EU, mPulse buys Zipari, New Mountain PE merges 3 payment integrity firms in $3B smush, Candid Health’s $29M raise, Oura buys Veri, Bloomer Tech’s cardio bra

It’s a dogpile of catchup news.

Owlet announced that it’s expanding its European distribution of the Dream Sock. The new countries are Greece, Poland, the Czech Republic, Romania, Slovakia, Hungary and Bulgaria. It is currently, according to its website, available in France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. It received its CE Mark certification in May. The Dream Sock is a non-prescription device that reports, for babies 1-13 months and 6 to 30 pounds, pulse rate, oxygen, wakings, and sleep trends in real-time via the Owlet Dream App. The app also allows alerts outside of range to be set. Owlet’s financials have improved substantially, though still in the loss column, as detailed in the Mobihealthnews article.

mPulse acquired Zipari for an undisclosed price. Both companies are in the healthcare ‘consumer experience (CX)’ segment which broadly includes using consumer information to ‘personalize health journeys’ that enhance the consumer experience for its health plans. Zipari is apparently more the back end of CX software solutions for insurers, third party administrators, and healthcare payers. There was no disclosure of sale price nor of transition of Zipari staff or the brand name. mPulse now covers 400+ leading healthcare organizations, including 29 of the 30 largest health plans in the country. mPulse is private and controlled by PSG. Release

Private equity company New Mountain Capital, in a $3 billion move, merges three payment integrity companies. New Mountain merged The Rawlings Group, Apixio’s Payment Integrity business, and Varis into a single $3 billion, 2,000 employee company around payment accuracy using various technologies. Rawlings is the largest with over 1,400 employees. It identifies third parties responsible for paying medical claims and is over 40 years old. Apixio provides administration, clinical, and financial program services for payers, previously part of Centene. The remainder of the company–its connected care platform and value-based care services–will be acquired by Datavant. Varis provides overpayment identification solutions including diagnosis-related groups (DRG) and ambulatory payment classification (APC) prospective payments. ‘Smushing’ makes sense if there is one controlling investor and the services dovetail with each other; from the description, the main company will be Rawlings. One hopes that they work out the ‘big bang’ details. FierceHealthcare

In a rare fairly large Series B funding, Candid Health scored $29 million. Candid is a revenue cycle automation and integration platform that simplifies billing for providers through API integrations with current system. The raise was led by 8VC with participation from existing investors First Round Capital, BoxGroup, and Y Combinator. Their total funding since 2019 is $47 million. Release

The Oura ring from Finland is not only still around, but is acquiring a metabolic health company, Veri. One of those ‘neat ideas’ which this Editor thought was gone is still around, having sold 2.5 million rings both direct and through Best Buy currently for $69.99 annually plus local tax, and now tracks over 20 biometrics around sleep, activity, heart health, and stress. Oura has had $148 million of funding since 2013, with its last big $100 million Series C back in the Palmy Days of 2021, with a small venture round in 2022. Veri is also Finnish, already partners with Oura, and has an app that via CGM (Abbott FreeStyle Libre) guides users to the right foods and habits for their bodies. Oura will be launching in conjunction with Veri a new feature, Meals, to help members to see how meal timing affects health metrics like sleep, stress, and recovery. Many of Veri’s team will be joining Oura, including their three founders. Release, Mobihealthnews 

An ECG that looks and wears like a bra. That is the device designed by Bloomer Tech, a MIT spinout. This wearable violates the “smaller and less obtrusive is better” dictum to collect more and more accurate data. The bra design places sensors all around a woman’s torso, the best position for heart data, in an accustomed way to collect data on heart function, lungs, hormones, and metabolism. It connects to an app that collects information and sends it to the wearer’s health provider. Bloomer Tech’s market will be women at risk or with heart disease, with the bra as a prescription item. Its first clinical trial was launched in March, funded by a $1.9 million grant from the National Institutes of Health. It comes in 12 sizes from 32B to 44C, Axios Boston

The two women founders, Chong Rodriguez and Aceil Halaby met in the MIT’s masters degree program, founding it in 2018. They named it after Amelia Bloomer, a 19th Century American suffragette, social reformer, publisher/writer, and advocate for less restrictive forms of dress than the whalebone corsets and tight dresses customary of the period. MedCityNews

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