TTA’s May Holiday Triple Feature: VA’s $840M ‘need for speed’ in the EHRM budget, Commure’s $70M raise, Innovaccer buys CaduceusHealth, Doximity vs. OpenEvidence, and two Perspectives on AI

Friday 23 May 2026

Leading up to two holidays–Memorial Day in the US and the UK late May bank holiday–healthcare news remains light. Our roundup includes Congressional hearings on VA’s need for speed–needing 25% more in the EHR budget, an update on the recent VA fraud indictment, two fundings/M&A, and a long Must Read on the ongoing Doximity-OpenEvidence feud worthy of the Corleones and the Barzinis. Rounding it out are two Perspectives: the first on managing the risk of hallucinating AI chatbots and the second on moving AI tools from pilots to full operations.

Please feel free to comment on the articles and pass along this Alert. Let me know if this is worth it to you!

Holiday weekend roundup: VA asks for ‘cyberspeed’ 25% EHR budget bump, update on EHRM fraud indictment; Commure raises $70M; Innovaccer buys Caduceus, lays off staff; Doximity, OpenEvidence slugfest gets hot

Perspectives: AI Hallucinations in Behavioral Health–Why Access Needs Better Infrastructure, Not Better Chatbots

Perspectives: The Next Phase of Healthcare AI Will Depend on Operational Execution

Last Week’s Headlines

A Must-Read potpourri: the ‘math’ of AI data center builds, healthcare AI failures, telehealth in schools, Hippocratic AI’s problems, the loss of empathy.

US Senate Committee on Aging hearings on senior safety 20 May–available online

Plus…

Character.AI sued by Pennsylvania on its chatbots posing as licensed physicians and psychiatrists

Oracle steps back from the AI debt brink with $16.3B financing for MI data center, the Project Jupiter ‘clean energy’ experiment in NM, and a major Federal DOW contract

Is the health tech business neglecting validated deep learning medical AI models versus less proven LLMs and generative AI?

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Holiday weekend roundup: VA asks for ‘cyberspeed’ 25% EHR budget bump, update on EHRM fraud indictment; Commure raises $70M; Innovaccer buys Caduceus, lays off staff; Doximity, OpenEvidence slugfest gets hot

A slower news week preceding the Memorial Day holiday in the US and the UK late May bank holiday.

Federal budgets for 2027 are in the Congressional washing machine, and the cycle is on ‘agitate’. VA Secretary Doug Collins has tagged a 25% increase in the EHR Modernization budget for FY 2027 over what is currently in the 2027 Military Construction and Veterans Affairs Appropriations bill –$4.2 billion versus $3.4 billion, an increase of $840 million. He testified on Wednesday 20 May to the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee and Thursday 21 May to the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Military Construction, Veterans Affairs and Related. Apparently, the biggest problem VA has with the much-repaired and now standardized Oracle EHR is that every VA executive director wants it now, not later. An additionally funded EHRM would speed up the cutover for VA facilities to go from ‘dial-up’ to ‘cyberspeed’ internally, in communicating with other VA hospitals, community care, and in record sharing with the military system and civilian health facilities.

Difficulties reported to date (April for four sites in Michigan, VISN 10) are around transferring health records between VA and Department of War facilities. DoW healthcare also uses Oracle, but a different version suited for their needs that has been fully implemented. 

While the House has already passed the bill at the lower budget number and sent it to the Senate, the subcommittee chair John Carter (R-Texas) during the hearing said they’re “not through with the possibility of getting you some more money”. 

VA’s implementation timeline is 19 before the end of this year (13 new and the 2020-24 six), 26 new sites in 2027 and 28 VA Medical Centers in 2028. Even sped up, there are still 90 more to go and the deployment is not expected to be complete till 2031. FedScoop 21 May, 30 April

Update on the fraud indictment of the former EHRM director, John Windom. Surprisingly, there has been little to no mainstream media coverage of the Federal charges against John Windom, who was indicted on 25 March in the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia. The three counts related to accepting cash and gifts from vendors plus failure to report them could bring a maximum of 35 years. This article on conservative news website PJ Media is the most recent (re)telling of the tale and links to nearly all the same sources this Editor included in our 3 April article. It is more colorful than our reporting but brings up an important point I overlooked: where, oh where, are the indictments of some of the vendors who doled out cash, gifts, and maybe more, and in return got prime and sub-contracts. He knew, they knew to keep quiet–‘loose lips sink ships’. Because any Federal contractor–I worked for two, Viterion Digital Health and Collaborative Health Systems, then part of WellCare Health Plans–receives compliance training on working with their Federal agency counterparts. 

Perhaps there are investigations and indictments to come, as I’ve seen in Federal Medicare fraud cases that peel like an endless onion over years. According to the VA inspector general, Mike Missal, who served from 2016 until January 2025, evidence was being gathered internally back during the Biden administration. This fits the timeline of the US Attorney requesting a grand jury be summoned then sworn in on 30 October 2025. Mr. Missal was fired along with 16 other inspectors general by the incoming Trump administration.

Since Mr. Windom was deeply engaged in the choice of Cerner for the VA EHR in 2017-2018, and in the disastrous implementation of VA Mann-Grandstaff (VISN 20) in October 2020 and four more in 2022, resulting in the rollout’s termination in 2023, Oracle would be unwise to not prepare for a few questions about Cerner’s relationship with Mr. Windom, as I wrote at the time. 

The PJ Media article also references the comprehensive article in the 27 March Spokane Spokesman-Review, which has been on the Cerner/Oracle implementation story since the implementation failure in the region’s Mann-Grandstaff VA facility. Their check of the OEHRM website as of that date confirmed that Mr. Windom was still listed as the deputy director of the Federal Electronic Health Management Office, the joint VA-DOD initiative in the role he assumed in January 2022 after the Mann-Grandstaff problems detonated and the then-Secretary reorganized the department. (Heads did not roll, but they rarely do with SES members). FTA: “The Federal Electronic Health Record Modernization Office did not respond on Thursday (26 March) when asked if Windom remains employed there.” The article by Orion Donovan Smith is a recommended read.

In the funding/M&A department

Healthcare software integrator Commure received a $70 million funding from current investors. Commure’s lead investor is General Catalyst. Commure now has $750 million raised and a $7 billion post-money valuation for its AI infrastructure development. Its subsidiary, Athelas, provides AI-based revenue cycle management and clinical workflow tools. The General Catalyst funding of $200 million plus is an interesting scheme, in that GC fronts the cost of sales and marketing and, in return, receives a share of the revenue from new customers generated by that investment, up to a fixed cap. The new funding will be used for scaling its RCM and practice management platforms, advancing the ‘shared intelligence layer’ beneath Commure’s workflows, and expanding their AI infrastructure into global healthcare markets. Release, Mobihealthnews

Innovaccer acquires CaduceusHealth, a revenue cycle management (RCM) and management services (MSO) provider. Neither transaction cost nor management transitions were disclosed. Well-funded Innovaccer ($675 million through a Series F) has been growing in AI-centric healthcare IT services mainly through acquisition. CaduceusHealth is the fifth in their creating a “comprehensive agentic stack” for health systems and provider groups in their Flow suite. Innovaccer claims to serve over 200 health systems and payers, 95% of community pharmacies, and 80 million patient lives across the US. Release Unfortunately, their growth has been matched by a reduction in staff, with 340 layoffs in the US and India. It is their third layoff in four years as it applies its own AI to automate its own processes. (We are seeing a lot of this across the board, allegedly.) FierceHealthcare

We close with a major Must Read with the OpenEvidence-Doximity battle.

OpenEvidence and Doximity are slugging it out for the same market funding–and a third competitor has just sneaked into the ring. OpenEvidence is the upstart, founded four years ago, and the best valued ($12 billion) yet private healthcare AI company on the planet Earth and is generally thought of as the up-and-coming platform for physician information. Doximity is the mature company, public with a $3.6 billion market cap, proven revenue of $645 million, and (be still my heart) profitable with an EBIDTA margin of 55% and a stunning 49% free cash flow margin. It’s been dubbed ‘LinkedIn for doctors’ but is actually much more with tools for secure telehealth, news, reputation management, and free CME.

They are mutually litigious. Both OpenEvidence (OE) and Doximity tag-team each other in product offerings, use defamation tactics and key staff poaching, and in product development, copycat each other, with Doximity generally leading development and OE following shortly thereafter. Coming up is Doximity’s new product, an in-workflow e-prescribing, prosaically called Doximity Prescribe. Based on the pattern, how long will it be before OE develops a similar product?

Where they make their money is only indirectly from users. Both are supported by a fixed source–pharmaceutical advertising. They both slug it out for physician attention. While doctors love (or hate) both, if they become too similar, the balance will tip. Into this bout steps OpenAI with a new professional product, ChatGPT for Clinicians [TTA 30 April]. Lurking near the ropes is the AI-powered iteration of Wolters Kluwer’s UpToDate peer-reviewed medical content, integrated with Microsoft and Abridge, already in 70% of the largest enterprise health systems because it’s been around forever. OE’s vulnerability may be overpromising in claiming ‘no hallucinations’ of their AI-generated medical content–a claim that is structurally impossible, and results in deficits in completeness, communication quality, and systems-based safety reasoning.

Digging through all of this is the intrepid Sergei Polevikov on his Substack AI Health Uncut. Grab a cuppa and sandwich for this one. For most of the article (Part 1 of 2!), a subscription is required. Consider it money well spent for access to some of the best investigative reporting around with plenty of backup. OpenEvidence Prescribe Coming to Your Doctor’s Office This Month?

A quickie news roundup: ChatGPT for Clinicians unveiled, UHG to invest $1.5B in AI, Aidoc raises $150M, TriFetch raises $1.9M pre-seed, Boehringer Ingelheim & Eko Health partner on canine heart murmur detection

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ChatGPT moves from healthcare enterprises to the clinician level. This new version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT, ChatGPT for Clinicians, is designed to support clinical tasks like clinical search, documentation workflows, and deep medical research. It will be free for any verified physician, NP, PA, or pharmacist in the US, and is available now via their information page here. With its release, ChatGPT is also introducing HealthBench Professional, described as “an open benchmark for real clinician chat tasks across three use cases: care consult, writing and documentation, and medical research.” Release

ChatGPT for Healthcare was announced in January, but available to only a limited group of healthcare organizations.

UnitedHealth Group is having some better days. Last week on their earnings call, they announced that all units exceeded Q1 expectations. Their Q1 adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $7.23 was well ahead of expectations, with total revenues of $111.7 billion, up 2% versus Q1 2025. Q1 membership fell slightly to 49.1 million from 49.8 million at the end of 2025. Their medical cost ratio (MCR) decreased to 83.9% from 84.8%, nearly a full point.

UHG is ‘on track’ to invest $1.5 billion in AI this year, especially at Optum with self-service digital scheduling that includes AI-enabled tools guiding patients “to the right appointment in the right setting at the right time”, plus increased digital access for members and providers with AI-enabled tools at UnitedHealth Care. 

UHG has been heavily criticized for its treatment of rural healthcare providers and hospitals. Timothy Noel, CEO of UnitedHealthcare Business, said that “We will accelerate payments in all lines of business by 50% for rural hospitals and exempt rural healthcare providers for most medical prior authorization requirements. And we are building network partnerships between rural providers and leading regional health systems.”  Let’s see if the good news stretches into Q2. Healthcare Finance News

Aidoc’s $150 million Series E brings their total funding to over $500 million. The AI-assisted clinical imaging system for radiology, cardiology, vascular and neurovascular healthcare teams is designed to help them find and triage injuries and other health conditions. It also integrates coordination software for stroke and cardiovascular care. The round for the NYC-based company was led by Growth Equity at Goldman Sachs Alternatives, with participation from General Catalyst, SoftBank Investment Advisors and NVentures (NVIDIA’s venture capital arm). The fresh funds will be used to grow global presence and expand into other clinical areas. FDA clearance for its AI triage tool was gained in January. Mobihealthnews, Release 

TriFetch has a healthy pre-seed round. A $1.9 million pre-seed these days is rather unusual but TriFetch, an AI automation platform built for independent specialty clinics just emerging from stealth, nabbed it from Nexus Venture Partners, with participation from angels with backgrounds at Google, Hippocratic, Mercor, and MIT. TriFetch’s platform automates three workflows that dominate clinic operating costs (the “tri”): patient calls and scheduling, referral processing, and prior authorizations. It’s led by UCLA graduate computer science PhDs  and researchers Varuni Sarwal and Rosemary He. So far results seem impressive, with their pilots at California ophthalmology, cardiology, and gastroenterology clinics with results that save time and money. In one GI practice, with staff processing up to 100 referrals per day, TriFetch handled that workflow end to end, freeing roughly 16 hours of staff time daily, saving the clinic $200,000 per year.  Pulse 2.0/release

And for those who fetch for us, a diagnostic for heart murmurs. Boehringer Ingelheim, the German pharmaceutical company with a specialty in animal health, and Eko Health, a ‘reimagined’ stethoscope for heart and lung disease, partnered to develop a device and app to detect, visualize, and grade heart murmurs in dogs. This combines BI’s CANINEBEAT AI diagnostic algorithm, the Eko Vet+ app, and the Eko CORE Digital Attachment that connects to most single-tube stethoscopes.  Canine heart murmurs and cardiac disease are difficult to detect in early stages, where diagnosis and treatment can be most helpful. Availability of the combined technology through both BI and Eko has started in the US and UK, with Germany up next month. Additional markets will be phased in during 2026 and 2027.  Release