Chutes and Ladders w/o 9 Feb: Biofourmis’ ex-CEO faces 7 major Singapore fraud charges (updated), Doximity’s 17% drop; Devoted Health’s big $366M raise, Garner Health garners $118M, Synthpop’s $15M Series A

Chutes go first…

The worst kind of Chute to go down is one that lands in a coal-scuttle full of fraud and criminal charges–in a country known for its punishments. Biofourmis’ former CEO is facing seven counts in Singapore. Rajput Kuldeep Singh, one of the founders and former CEO, has been charged in Singapore with three counts of abetting the falsification of accounts, three charges of fraud by false representation or abetment thereof, and one charge of forgery for the purpose of cheating. These are connected to the Singaporean company, Biofourmis Holdings Pte Ltd., between 2021 and 2022. Headquarters moved to Boston after its Series B in 2019.

Mr. Rajput (surname is first) is accused of falsely invoicing US$16.5 million to Singapore’s Ministry of Health (MOH), and later false representations such as inflated revenue figures, falsified financial statements, a misrepresentation on payment by the MOH, and subsequently a forged employee stock option plan offer letter. This was purportedly intended to deceive DBS Bank into transferring funds from the bank.

The penalties are high in a country that canes offenders for spitting on the sidewalk. The Singapore Police Force announced the charges in a 3 Feb release. Each fraud charge against Mr. Rajput carries a maximum 20 years plus a fine. Falsifying accounts and forgery max out at 10 years plus a fine. Even if convicted of one charge, Mr. Rajput is looking at perhaps a decade of time in a Singapore prison–on multiple charges, perhaps the rest of his adult life. Mr. Rajput is a 34-year-old Indian national. Presently, he is out on bail of S$600,000 (US$475,000) and through his legal representation Eugene Thuraisingam Asia, indicated in court on Feb 4 that he intends to claim trial. Singaporean law moves fast–the pre-trial scheduled to start on 1 April. The Online Citizen (Singapore) Here’s the original article in the Straits Times.

Update on extradition: Should Mr. Rajput remove himself to the US and try to evade extradition, his attorneys will tell him that it may be futile, but will string out things. Extradition is covered by a foundational 1931 bilateral treaty that originated with the UK (as Singapore was a colony then) and has been honored since with modifications and expansions (e.g. the Extradition Act of 1968 and Amendments 2022). The mechanism is straightforward. A request has to be made by the Singapore ministry for law and subsequently heard in a US Federal court. The charges must be valid under existing bilateral laws and meet the requirement that the charges carry a sentence of 2 years+. The extradition back to Singapore must then be approved by the Secretary of State. Fraud, embezzlement, and the taking of money under false pretenses are all covered. Singapore is also an active cooperator with the US whereas many countries with treaties are not. Another complicating factor is that Mr. Rajput is an Indian national and may hold multiple passports.

What about Biofourmis? It merged in October 2024 with CopilotIQ, a smaller RPM/nursing company in home health that took over Biofourmis’ business in in-home delivery of complex care for health systems, payers, and pharmaceutical companies. It was announced by CopilotIQ. This oddity didn’t square with other financial reporting indicating that Biofourmis was the acquiring party, yet was reasonable considering that CopilotIQ’s CEO and his management were running the combined company. Yet Biofourmis was a much larger company, a unicorn with over $400 million acquired in 10 rounds of financing.  Another oddity: Mr. Rajput transferred his 96.6 million shares (!!) in Biofourmis to 19 existing investors immediately prior to the merger, according to filings with ACRA, Singapore’s Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority. Today, the single company runs as two separate brands. In 2024, Mr. Rajput returned to Singapore (and Boston) to found a new company, OutcomesAI, an AI-enabled nurse assistant and voice agent which raised $10 million last October. To be continued….

Doximity, a/k/a LinkedIn for doctors plus virtual visit capability, took a 17% crack on Friday after a wild overnight ride. This is despite the company clocking a decent Q4 2025 beating analysts’ revenue expectations. Sales were up 9.8% versus Q4 2024 to $185.1 million. EBITDA guidance for 2025 is in line at $356 million at the midpoint. What was the problem? Q1 2026. The company guidance is $143.5 million at midpoint, which is below analyst estimates of $151.3 million. It doesn’t seem like much, but the volatility indicates that Doximity has growing competition for the 80% of US doctors who are members. Epocrates and Medscape have for years been the main competition for partner dollars, but the new kid on the block, OpenEvidence, which just clocked a healthy Series D for its medical info search engine, is putting all three in the shade. The pie is also shrinking. Pharma companies are overall spending less and Doximity is spending more on a suite of new tools: DocsGPT, Doximity Dialer, and Doximity Scribe. Share price has stayed flat since Friday. Considering it once traded over $80…. Yahoo Finance, TIKR

Now for the Ladders…climbing them with a ‘barbell’…

Devoted Health raked in $366 million of Series F and post-F funding. This insurtech survivor, a combination of Medicare Advantage (MA) plans with in-house telehealth and in-home care, raised a split Series F: $48 million in November 2025 and at the end of January a Series F-Prime of $317 million. These very late rounds are rare in this constrained funding market. Both were led by long time investor The Space Between (TSB) [TTA 3 Jan 2024], in partnership with Centricus, a London-based global investment firm. This Editor counted 18 additional investors, which is a tell–even when you’re “redefining how healthcare is experienced and delivered” and they are 466,000 members strong, up 121 percent and across 29 states, with 98% of members in 4+ Star plans, they had to knock on a lot of doors for the raise. This raise is also about half of what it would have been in the 2020-22 Silly Money days. One wonders if an IPO is next. Devoted Health release

Garner Health’s latest raise is a $118 million Series D today (Tuesday). The employer-focused provider of health data analytics incentives to guide employees to the best-performing doctors in the employer’s existing health plans now has a total raise of $200 million and a valuation topping $1.3 million. The round was led by Kleiner Perkins with participation from Redpoint, Maverick, Kaiser Permanente Ventures, Mercy, Plus Capital, and other existing investors. Garner is claiming revenue increasing over 130% versus their prior year. Release

On the other end of the barbell, Cambridge MA-based Synthpop (not a music genre) had an early raise of $15 million that closed last week. The new Series A brought their total funding to $23 million. It was led by Ansa Capital, with Defy.vc and Peterson Ventures participating in the round with Storm Ventures and strategic investor Bruce Broussard. Marco DeMeireles, co‑founder and managing partner at Ansa Capital will be joining Synthpop’s board. Synthpop uses AI processes to coordinate document intelligence, payer-aware reasoning, and conversational voice agents to automate up to 80% of healthcare business processes, integrating directly with EHR, billing, and e-prescribe platforms. It was founded in 2023 by CEO Elad Ferber and CTO Jan Jannink, PhD, who have considerable previous founder experience. Release

News roundup 23 Oct: views on a CVS breakup and CEO replacement, Amwell’s interesting new CFO, CopilotIQ/Biofourmis merge (updated), 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 

Update: What’s interesting is that CopilotIQ appears to be a relatively small company with only two funding rounds listed on Crunchbase. It was listed as one of Fast Company‘s most innovative companies of 2024 back in March and closed 2023 with 10,000 members, up from 200 at the start of 2022.  Biofourmis, founded in Singapore and moving to Boston in 2019, 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. It could be a merger arranged, as nowadays many are, by the funders. It also may not be, because the release does not disclose the financials of these two private companies and positions it as a merger. But this is one merger that makes sense to provide wider availability of integrated in-home services. What is odd: Crunchbase is listing it as an acquisition by Biofourmis, which is not what the release states nor other sources.

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 Update: Rajput transferred his 96.6 million shares in Biofourmis to 19 existing investors immediately prior to the merger, according to filings with ACRA, Singapore’s Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority. DealStreetAsia

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

Thursday news roundup: dimming SPACs, hospital-at-home pilots in DFW, Connected Health debuts bespoke home care services configurator in NIR

The prognosis for SPACs? Like Lucas electrics, dim. Too many went public on last year’s overdose of moonbeams and celery stalks at midnight, to this year’s plummeting share prices and red ink. Not only are SPACs now targets of Federal, including SEC, scrutiny, but they have Elizabeth Warren, the Senatorial Scourge of Finance, after them promising legislation with even tighter regulations than the SEC. But let’s face it, most SPAC’d companies have yet to stumble their way into profitability. From financing Hero to Zero in two years. This short article in PrivCo’s Daily Stack will confirm all of this.  

Hospital-at-home pilots in the Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas area. Biofourmis is piloting an initiative with Wise Health System for its Hospital@Home end-to-end solution that combines artificial intelligence (AI)-based remote patient monitoring (RPM) technology and clinical support services. This is to qualify for Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) Acute Hospital Care at Home program. Select patients can choose to be admitted to home versus the hospital, then monitored by the Biofourmis Virtual Bed Kit based on a wearable biosensor feeding into a digital tablet pre-loaded with the patient-facing Biovitals Hospital@Home app. Wise’s staff will visit the patient at least twice daily to conduct in-person examinations, assessments, and additional testing as needed. Wise Health is a four-hospital, integrated care network. Biofourmis release

What you pick is what you get. Domiciliary care provider Connected Health is debuting Connected Health 2.0, a ‘home care configurator’ which will enable clients and families to build a package of services for home care. Launched during Carer’s Week in Northern Ireland, it custom-packages physical care, wearables, medication devices and virtual care services. Once the client or family member configures the care package, Connected Health calls them to review suitability then follows up with an on-site risk assessment in the home before service begins. The Irish News article is light on details like when it begins in Northern Ireland, but Connected Health’s timetable is to roll it out in the UK and Ireland over the next two years.