TTA’s autumn leaves: Amazon Rx kiosks for One Medical, VillageMD shrinks in TX, Rock Health’s odd take on Q3 investment, Trilliant Health’s dizzying what-ails-healthcare analysis

 

Friday 10 October 2025

Several quick looks at Amazon’s test of pharmacy dispensing kiosks in One Medical clinics, VillageMD’s Texas selloff, and Rock Health’s strangely ambivalent report on Q3 digital health investment. Today’s deeper dive is a Must Read–Trilliant Health’s diagnosis on what ails US healthcare and why a “return to first principles” is badly needed, detailed in a 100+ page free report.

Editor Donna will be taking a short additional hiatus; back w/o 27 October.

Editor Donna’s selective roundup: One Medical’s Amazon Rx kiosks, VillageMD sells off Texas, digital health investment’s Q3 boost

Will “expensive, complex and inefficient” US healthcare respond to six major demographic, cost, supply trends–and recuperate? Or further sicken?

From our last Alert: Editor Donna is back. Here’s the catchup.

Congratulations to James Batchelor MBE (Well Deserved!)

And a read with even more relevance now: Should free-falling UnitedHealth Group be broken up? Or break itself up to survive, before it becomes another GE? (updated) (Not a rant, more a ‘get going’ to avoid disaster!)

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Support not only a publication but also a well-informed international community.

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Donna Cusano, Editor In Chief
donna.cusano@telecareaware.com

Telehealth & Telecare Aware – covering news on latest developments in telecare, telehealth and eHealth, worldwide.

Will “expensive, complex and inefficient” US healthcare respond to six major demographic, cost, supply trends–and recuperate? Or further sicken?

A new and exhaustive report diagnoses the US healthcare patient, pronounces it sick, and the proposed cure involves a “return to first principles”. A new report from researcher Trilliant Health outlines the unsustainability of the current status quo. As of 2023, the US system is the most expensive in the world in absolute terms. It grew from $2.8 trillion in 2012 to $4.9 trillion in 2023 with relatively flat demand and utilization (with 2022 and 2023 skewed because of Covid). In terms of GDP, it was 17.6%, a stunning number that will grow by almost 3 percentage points in the next ten years. The report outlines six trends that are anticipated to affect healthcare, based on data analysis of consumer demand, healthcare supply, and yield–the pricing where they intersect plus regulation and market incentives (e.g. reimbursement). This is a 30,000 foot view of an incredibly detailed report (details below):

  1. Price sensitivity and affordability concerns are reshaping demand. Prices have increased 54.5% from 2009 to 2023, compared to a 45.7% increase in overall consumer prices. Average annual insurer commercial plan premiums are up 85.7% between 2010 and 2024.
  2. Stakeholders are slow to adapt to changing demographic and lifestyle trends. US life expectancy is flat, and the average person is living 12.5 years in poor health. This is compared to residents of the 38 OECD countries, who on average live four to eight years longer and in better health. Avoidable mortality rates per 100,000 are over 100 points higher. Chronic disease mortality among those aged 18-44 increased by 6.4% in the past six years, led by chronic liver diseases. US population is also shifting to the ‘sunbelt’ stages, fleeing California and New York State.
  3. The healthcare delivery system incentivizes specialty care intervention instead of primary care prevention. This is driven by the rise of chronic conditions including “long Covid”, GI diseases, and behavioral health, as well as the low supply of primary care physicians. Retailers and Amazon, after a ‘gold rush’ starting about five years ago, are either exiting, pivoting, or scaling back. Somehow behavioral health volume increased by 43.7% between 2018 and 2024, despite psychiatry not even showing up in their physician specialty analysis. New drug development also is increasingly targeting chronic and rare diseases, with about one-third targeting cancer.
  4. Fraud, waste and abuse are pervasive in U.S. healthcare. To no one’s surprise, rates by CPT codes vary widely and wildly, insurance payers have favored systems, and hospital administration gets more money than direct patient care. Expensive EHRs aren’t delivering on workflow and patient portals. Brokers and PBMs add to cost and complexity.
  5. The transition to alternative care settings and therapies is accelerating. In-patient care innovations tend to start in the hospital and then migrate outward to outpatient settings such as ambulatory surgical care centers. Behavioral health, for instance, has migrated to telehealth. Patients with mental health needs who are well managed and include telehealth tend to have have far more in-patient utilization than unmanaged patients, regardless of utilization level. GLP-1 utilization increased 744.6% between 2018 and 2023, and is increasingly being prescribed and delivered via virtual care providers such as Hims & Hers, Ro, LifeMD, and WW in deals with the pharma companies. Rural health continues to shrink and cut inpatient services.
  6. If the industry cannot deliver value for money and employers will not demand it, the government is prepared to force it. Their effectiveness in this is perhaps a debatable point, since CMS’ value-based care programs such as MSSP and REACH have not really reformed the system, contained costs, nor spread as practices. The profitability of insurers has also deflated. The Trump Administration’s moves with Pfizer on ‘most favored nation’ pricing for Medicaid and direct sales fit here. Coupled with drug manufacturers’ selective desire to bypass PBMs and go direct, there’s a trend here to cut out the middleman.

As to telehealth, once seen as a cost and supply panacea, since 2020 and the pandemic, volume declined by 32.2%, driven by a 52% decrease in non-behavioral care. What remains is behavioral health, 66.9% of visits in 2024. Even that has declined versus prior year from 70.5%. (Slide 84). Another panacea was supposed to be EHRs but they tend to be closed systems, non-interoperable, and another increaser of complexity.

Their conclusion is that healthcare is at a crossroads–no surprise–and that healthcare is now locked into a “doom loop” (Slide 110). Prices increase, the financial strain on patients, providers, payers, and employers increase, patients enter the system sicker, access decreases, and the inefficiency increases geometrically. Their call (Slide 111) is for a return to see what is what is essential and necessary. “At its core, the healthcare system is intended to connect patients with providers for medical care.” Our currently redundant and complex system (see the nightmare that is Slide 8) cannot do that.

The Trilliant Health report is available for download here. Release.

TTA’s Unofficial Summer kickoff: breaking up UnitedHealth to save it, post-GLP-1 weight gain, soft robots, NZ telehealth controversy, Midi Health widening women’s health, AssistIQ, Ambience, more!

30 May 2025

Brrrr….it’s unofficially summer as we leave May behind. Our big article this week is your Editor’s think-piece on breaking up UnitedHealth Group in order to save it–and healthcare. We also look at post-GLP-1 weight gain–and what it means for providers, in-person and telehealth, ‘soft’ robotics out of Scotland, NZ’s telehealth war with GPs, and what’s doing at companies like Midi Health, AssistIQ, Ambience, Auxira, and Yosi Health. And plenty of weekend reading and viewing!

Weekend reading/viewing (for me too): Rural telehealth blackouts and value-based care’s ‘utopia’ (Set aside the time)

Short takes: Midi Health’s longevity care for women covered by (some) insurance, NZ government 24/7 telehealth scored by GPs, Auxira tele-cardiology follow-up launches (Two disappointments that look like advances)

News roundup: GLP-1 weight regain real, soft robots walk off 3D printer, Ambience’s AI coding beats doctors by 27%, Get a Second Opinion debuts, $11.5M for AssistIQ (Reality bites GLP-1s and a soft robot wee bairn)

Job Posting: Yosi Health seeks Demand Generation Manager and Manager, Data Analytics & Reporting

Should free-falling UnitedHealth Group be broken up? Or break itself up to survive, before it becomes another GE? (updated) (Not a rant, more a ‘get going’ to avoid disaster!)

From last week: The major news the week before US Memorial Day was the Hinge Health IPO, the first for digital health in two years–but the downside was that it was at a lower valuation. Denouements abounded with most 23andMe genetic assets bought by Regeneron, without a drink of Lemonaid. WeightWatchers’ time may have passed, new heads for Calibrate and Oak Street, and two more ‘arranged marriages’, Smarter Technologies and Fuze Health. An update on the VA EHRM in the budget. Masimo’s recovering, as is Ted of Strata-gee

News roundup 22 May: an inflight ‘save’ and AliveCor’s KardiaMobile, rolling out the VA/Oracle EHR in ‘waves’, Fuze Health formed from LetsGetChecked/Truepill, hacking and ransomware 92% of PHI data breaches (A renaming of a 2024 ‘arranged marriage’–can it be saved?)

News roundup: Hinge Health public @$32/share, lower valuation. Is WeightWatchers game over? Calibrate replaces CEO, new prez for Oak Street, NMC gets ‘Smarter’ rolling up 3 portfolio companies, another splash of investor ‘cold water’ (The first health tech IPO in 2 years and ‘smushing’ when they can’t)

Update: Masimo’s website status and an analysis of the Sound United sale (Getting up and running post-attack, but what happened?)

23andMe sold to Regeneron for $256M in court-supervised bankruptcy, sans Lemonaid. And is it worth it? (We come up with a number, it’s likely)

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Support not only a publication but also a well-informed international community.

Contact Editor Donna for more information.

Help Spread the News

Please tell your colleagues about this free news service and, if you have relevant information to share with the rest of the world, please let me know!

Donna Cusano, Editor In Chief
donna.cusano@telecareaware.com

Telehealth & Telecare Aware – covering news on latest developments in telecare, telehealth and eHealth, worldwide.

News roundup: GLP-1 weight regain real, soft robots walk off 3D printer, Ambience’s AI coding beats doctors by 27%, Get a Second Opinion debuts, $11.5M for AssistIQ

Another review/meta-analysis confirms that GLP-1 weight off doesn’t stay off. A University of Oxford systemic review and meta-analysis of 130 full texts, distilled to 11 studies with 6,370 participants, determined the quantity of weight gain after discontinuing GLP-1 RA (receptor agonists) drugs. The gain was approximately 0.8kg (1.8 lbs.) per week for the new, more effective and common GLP-1 drugs semaglutide and tirzepatide, which means that weight loss was regained in approximately 1.5 years (76 weeks+). The meta-study notes that the regain is greater than observed following behavioral weight management programs. The study was done by researchers at the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford and the National Institute of Health Research Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, Oxford. Presented at the 32nd European Congress on Obesity (ECO) 2025 in Malaga, Spain.  Poster PDF here.

Another study from Sacred Heart University (Connecticut) noted last week as a sidebar to our WeightWatchers and Calibrate article also found that the weight regain was proportional to the original weight loss. The regain varied by type of GLP-1 drug, but the study labels it ‘significant’. Obesity Reviews (Wiley) 4 April 2025 

GLP-1 weight loss is not puppies and rainbows as it’s being marketed right now. First, 30% of users quit in four weeks and 42% by 12 weeks due to side effects like nausea, constipation, vomiting, and worse.  BCBS studyGLP-1 Digest 4 Apr  The flip side is that over half make it past the three-month bar. But it is not ‘one and done’, and right now expectations are not being managed well, especially by the teleprescribers advertising on TV and radio. For the clinically obese, to maintain their hard-won goal weight and health benefits, it will require management as a chronic disease,  continuing weight/lifestyle management, and perhaps another round of the drugs in future. For the non-obese, it requires continuing weight/lifestyle management and a recognition of the rebound. It’s a good news/bad news scenario for teleprescribers and pharmas: users will require ongoing management and may cycle through another round in a year or two- to lose weight again, but they could also be disappointed and not want to spend the money. Hat tip to the GLP-1 Digest 25 May on Substack.

A “soft robot” that strolls off its 3D printer. We’ve missed our robots. Scientists at the University of Edinburgh developed a new, inexpensive printer that created a palm-sized, 100% soft plastic, walking robot. When connected to a compressed air supply, the robot walks off the 3D Flex Printer (video download here). It’s not much to look at (at left in the picture) but soft plastic robots have great potential for use in areas such as nuclear decommissioning, the biomedical sector and in space. Designs for the printer are public and the printer uses inexpensive off-the-shelf parts that cost less than £400 and don’t require a PhD to put together. University of Edinburgh release

Ambience Healthcare’s ambient AI model now outperforms board-certified physicians in ICD-10 coding accuracy. Ambience’s platform, trained using OpenAI’s Reinforcement Fine-Tuning (RFT) technology, has a 27% relative improvement over physician benchmarks, which means a significant reduction in ICD-10 coding errors. The Ambience system combines scribing patient encounters with identifying the ICD-10 codes to generate a fully informed note that then allows the clinician to review and confirm accurate documentation and coding in real time. Ambience covers codes in over 100 specialties and is in use at 40 health organizations for documentation.  Release

Get A Second Opinion enters the DTC information market on medications. The subscription model at a modest $35/year solves the problem of consumer confusion over medications, interactions, alternatives, and cost. Its two tools are:

  • Discovery Tool: Analyzes a single medication and/or condition against a unique profile, generating a comprehensive report with rankings, supporting data, and average monthly cost—often identifying more effective alternatives with fewer side effects at a lower cost. The annual plan covers up to 10 reports.
  • Planner: Evaluates up to 10 medications treating up to 10 conditions simultaneously, identifying optimal treatment combinations while minimizing side effects and adverse interactions. The annual plan covers up to two reports.

The profile is built using their AI Diagnostician engine, which analyzes age, sex, BMI, medications, pre-existing conditions, and price. It  cross-references each unique profile with FDA data, medical studies, warning labels, and clinical outcomes. Get A Second Opinion also offers a 100% accuracy guarantee. Having all the information in one place is more than reassuring and worth it, especially when prescribed new drugs. Your Editor can say this from first-hand experience–and her brother is a physician! Release

AssistIQ’s surgical supply chain management system raised a Series A of $11.5 million. Funders were Battery Ventures, with participation from existing investor Tamarind Hill. AssistIQ tracks actual supply and implant usage in operating rooms and procedural areas using the AIQ Capture platform that tracks supplies and implants as they are used, eliminating RFID and barcodes, and integrating them into EHR and billing records with 98% accuracy versus half in manual systems. The Montreal-based company had an initial seed raise of C$2.5 million from StandUp Ventures. Its US flagships are design partner Northwell Health (Allscripts transitioning to Epic), Owensboro Health Regional Hospital in Kentucky (Epic), and others in coming months. It is also a partner with CHUM— Centre hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal , the anchor hospital for the University of Montreal. Mobihealthnews, Battery Ventures release, BusinessWire release

These just in: drug compounders sue FDA over semaglutide scarcity removal; Sycamore’s Walgreens buy plans begin to show

What the telehealth prescribers can’t do, the compounders are. A major drug compounder association, the Outsourcing Facilities Association, along with member North American Custom Laboratories, LLC, both based in Texas, filed suit yesterday (24 February) against the FDA to vacate the final action removing semaglutide, the active ingredient in GLP-1 drugs, from the shortage list. The FDA announced that it was being removed from the shortage list effective April-May, after months of compounders legally creating semaglutide-based weight loss drugs as permitted during the shortage. This was certainly good news for Novo Nordisk, the pharmaceutical company that developed and markets Ozempic and Wegovy [TTA 25 Feb].

The compounding was a boon for telehealth providers such as Hims and Hers, Ro, 23andMe (Lemonaid), Future Health, Weight Watchers, Lark, and many others. It allowed them to customize injectable formulations for customers on weight loss programs at a far lower cost than standard branded products. The FDA allows this only during times of shortage (compounded by Section 503A pharmacies and Section 503B outsourcing facilities as “essential copies” of FDA-approved drugs). Exceptions are also made if the standard drug is in some way inappropriate for the patient who then medically requires a customized version, e.g. with adjusted dosage, method of dosing, or added/deleted ingredients, but these are not ‘mass’ circumstances or situations. 

Among the grounds presented in the suit against the FDA are that the shortage is still going on with delays in prescription filling, leading to patient harm; that FDA’s delisting was arbitrary without the required notice with public comment nor was it published in the Federal Register; and that it is ‘arbitrary and capricious’. Novo Nordisk has admitted publicly that supply constraints could still exists. 

Continued ‘customization’ is vital to telehealth prescribers’ revenue, while branding is vital to the pharmaceutical developers undercut by compounding. In 2024, Hims alone earned $225 million in revenue from compounded semaglutide and other GLP-1 type drugs. Both Novo Nordisk and Lilly (Zepbound) have pushed back on the compounders on safety and risk, along with lower prices in new delivery types such as vials versus autoinjectors.

The suit was filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of Texas. Biopharma Dive

More intriguing details if Sycamore Partners takes Walgreens Boots Alliance private. Financial Times reported via Reuters that according to the usual “people familiar with the matter”, Sycamore’s plan is to separate WBA into three parts, like Gaul: US retail pharmacy, Boots UK, and US Healthcare (VillageMD, CareCentrix, and Shields Health Solutions). They would have distinct capital structures. There’s minimal information beyond that. Sycamore is not expected to have difficulty financing the take-private, and WBA chairman Stefano Pessina is expected to have an ownership stake. The news drove WBA shares up today about 5% and 10% in the last five days. But the news seems to be moving along. VillageMD’s on the market is assumed but it is not certain any sale would complete in time. Crain’s Chicago Business

News roundup: DOJ investigating UHG on Medicare Advantage billing upcoding; Teladoc’s BetterHelp therapists using AI?–a short seller alleges; Hims whacked by FDA ending compounded GLP-1s (updated); some fired FDA staffers in CDRH reinstated

UHG’s annus horribilis gets more horribilis. News broke on Friday 21 February via the Wall Street Journal (paywalled) that UnitedHealth Group is reportedly under investigation by the US Department of Justice–again.  The DOJ is looking at UHG’s billing practices for members covered by UnitedHealthcare Medicare Advantage (MA) plans on diagnoses that were made to generate extra payments, a practice known in the industry as upcoding. This also involves the many practices that UHG owns or has relationships through Optum, about 10% of primary care practices. These practices are receiving visits from DOJ investigators, certainly something that would strike some fear into any doctor’s or practice manager’s heart. 

The WSJ reported that two providers cited in their article provided documentation, while another person said that the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG) is involved in the probe.

It’s a real Mound of Misery for UHG.

  • MA plans and their set rates for additional benefits not covered under original Medicare have been under HHS/CMS scrutiny in the past year, and health plans have been running higher costs than anticipated as covered patients have returned back to care.
  • UHG’s OptumRx unit last year was reported as under investigation on antitrust grounds.
  • Optum’s Change Healthcare (contested by DOJ but approved) is still recovering from an unprecedented hacking and ransomwaring, with the huge expense of restoring systems plus notification and providing a reported 100 million with free credit monitoring services.
  • The proposed $3.3 billion deal with Amedisys for home care continues to be delayed by the DOJ antitrust suit.
  • Their UnitedHealthcare president was assassinated in New York, and his (alleged) killer is starting his trial here, a spectacle which will go into the summer. But the issue that supposedly tipped off the murder–claim denials and denials of care due to policies and the use of AI, isn’t going away–jumping in the fray is megainvestor Bill Ackman.

While Federal involvement with health plans comes with the territory, the adversarial relationship with DOJ far exceeds the norm. The share price reflects it, having cracked 26% in the past six months. Those accepting the 30,000 buyouts on offer may be grateful if they take them. CNBC, FierceHealthcare

Another backwash from the use of AI? Teladoc is receiving some bad publicity it can ill afford. There are allegations of their therapists using AI-drafted responses with patients–and this apparently is becoming more frequent. It’s been percolating on social media boards such as Reddit (see example here) for some time. The latest is a report from a short seller* of Teladoc, Blue Orca Capital, that alleges that BetterHelp therapists not only use ChatGPT for text responses outside of live sessions (messaging), but also during live chat sessions. This goes against Teladoc’s own stated policy against AI therapy as ‘dehumanizing’  in a lengthy blog post ranging from social media to job loss as a result as AI. Blue Orca includes first hand information from two BetterHelp patients, an allegation from a competitor that BetterHelp doesn’t care, and that therapists are actually incentivized on the word length of responses they give to a patient, overloading their schedule, and being available 24/7 to patients paying a reported $400/month. Given BetterHelp’s prominence in Teladoc’s earnings–according to them “accounting for 40% of the Company’s revenues and adjusted EBITDA since FY21”, adding in their other financial factors, their dim view is jarring if you like or own TDOC.  Developing. Hat tip to HIStalk 2/24/25

*Editor’s note: Blue Orca Capital, as a short seller, profits when a stock goes down. Blue Orca has a short position in TDOC. So our Readers should take their position into account. Short sellers are also prohibited by securities law from spreading false information about a stock for the purposes of profiting from its decline (Rule 10b-5 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.)

The Feds giveth and taketh away Hims’ weight loss business. Updated information. Friday’s good news was that FDA has reclassified the shortage of semaglutide, the active ingredient in GLP-1 drugs, as ‘resolved’, meaning It’s Over and it’s easier to get your Wegovy, Ozempic, Zepbound, etc. prescription. The bad news is that online prescribers that were authorized by FDA to use less expensive compounding to approximate or customize the branded versions of these drugs for weight loss, are now prohibited from doing so. They have till April or May to transition to branded injectable versions. This affects the bottom line of all these telemedicine prescribers such as Ro, Weight Watchers, Future Health (a heavy local radio advertiser), 23andMe, and Hims & Hers. Hims, the showiest in class, took a breathtaking 25% hit on their stock between Friday and Monday.

It is not only cost of branded drugs but also that so many competitors have jumped into the field, creating another shortage of the branded drugs, that looms. Suppliers of compounded drugs, the high volume compounding pharmacies (not your corner pharmacy that does compounding based on Rx), may be reluctant to continue supplying telemedicine prescribers in reasonable fear of FDA action or pharma lawsuits that could put them out of business.

Hims also publicly took the hardest line against the pharma companies, implying in their now infamous Super Bowl commercial that their obesity drugs are priced “for profits, not patients”, unlike Hims’, of course. Novo Nordisk, the Ozempic and Wegovy manufacturer, in turn has taken a hard stance against the compounders pointing out that a compounded version isn’t standardized nor FDA-approved for safety and efficacy.

A custom, compounded version of a drug can only be sold when there is a shortage or if the branded drug is in some way inappropriate for the patient requiring a customized version, e.g. with adjusted dosage, method of dosing, or added/deleted ingredients. Look for Hims and other telemedicine prescribers to start pushing this POV. FierceHealthcare, MedCity News

Some FDA reviewers reinstated after DOGE cuts. The ~230 probationary and other employees who were let go with severance then partially reinstated are reported to be reviewers in the CDRH (Center for Devices and Radiological Health). The 183 reinstated reviewers are actually funded by the industry through the Medical Device User Fee Amendment (MDUFA) agreements to help speed the review and approval process. There is considerable confusion about this because phone calls went out over the weekend but as of today (Monday) there is no written confirmation from HR or the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). It remains murky as do layoffs in the rest of HHS. FierceHealthcare, Endpoints

Short takes: UK’s Cera raises $150M, $105M for Qventus, Solera Health’s $40M; General Catalyst’s AWS deal, Virta Health hits $100M in revenue, powered by GLP-1 maintenance; VirtuAlly’s JC telehealth accreditation

A ‘this-n-that’ roundup, with a flurry of fundings and more.

Larger fundings are really swinging it this month, making it feel a little bit like old times:

Cera raises $150 million for UK/NHS expansion, platform AI development, and upscaling. The $150 million funding is split between equity and debt, via lead investors BDT & MSD Partners and Schroders Capitals, plus Earlymarket, Guinness Ventures, DigitalHealth, and Robin Klein, a private UK investors. Cera has raised a total of $407 million, with their last raise of $302 million in 2022. 

Cera supports a spectrum of in-home health through its proprietary AI-assisted carer platform. Their nurses and other staff carers use the app on phones (primarily) to direct care and monitor patients. AI and ML assists enable caregivers to view and react to changes in condition. Families can also view reporting on the app. The company claims results of daily savings of £1 million for the UK healthcare system, hospitalization reductions of up to 70%, a 20% reduction in patient falls, and hospital discharges that are up to five times faster. It supports an estimated 60,000 daily in-person healthcare visits across UK homes, partners with over 150 local governments, and two-thirds of NHS Integrated Care Systems. They also claim to be EBITDA positive (as of 2022) and free-cash-flow positive from last year. TechFundingNews, TechCrunch

Qventus raises $105 million in a Series D. The investment in the care operations and automation platform for over 115 health systems was led by KKR’s Next Generation Technology III Fund with Bessemer Venture Partners plus new strategic investors Northwestern Medicine, HonorHealth, and Allina Health. Qventus claims to be ‘AI-first’ for automating routine care and record tasks, increasing team productivity up to 50%. The new funding will be used to accelerate the development and commercialization of solutions powered by its AI Operational Assistants into new care settings beyond its Surgical Growth and Inpatient Capacity solutions. Total funding to date is $203 million over 10 rounds. Release, MedCityNews

A $40 million round for Solera Health gets them to a Series E. The insider round was co-led by payer group Health Care Service Corporation (HCSC). It also includes investors Adams Street, Cobalt Ventures, and Horizon Mutual Holdings, Inc. Funding to date totals $112 million. Solera’s HALO platform provides access to hundreds of digital health applications for payers and employers, including apps for virtual specialty care in areas such as hypertension, high cholesterol, diabetes prevention, and weight management, to drive down the cost of care. Also announced was the confirmation of interim CEO John Santelli to the position. He joined Solera after nearly 30 years with UnitedHealth Group, departing as CIO. Release, MedCityNews

When giants meet…new AI models follow, with General Catalyst allying with Amazon Web Services (AWS) to develop AI tools for its portfolio companies. The focus will be on cloud services and generative AI using Amazon Bedrock, the ML application for building generative AI on AWS. This will be used for improving predictive analytics around patient treatment outcomes and insights into factors such as disease progression. Also mentioned are tools based on Anthropic and Mistral AI, along with securely trained health care-specific models. 

First up are the expanding Commure and Aidoc. Their specialized technology solutions like Copilot Suite and aiOS will be integrated with AWS’s AI and data capabilities. General Catalyst, besides investing in many healthcare and digital health companies, will be using this for their separate HATco, The Health Assurance Transformation Corporation. HATco was founded in October 2023 to develop an interoperability model for technology solutions, targeting health systems and payers. Mobihealthnews, Yahoo Finance/Global Data, FierceHealthcare

In the hot nexus of diabetes management and weight loss, Virta Health passed the $100 million in revenue threshold and growth of 60%. It’s remarkable given that Virta specializes in reversing Type 2 diabetes and obesity via nutrition modification and lifestyle changes. They’ve tweaked their approach into what happens after GLP-1 patients go off the drug, though they now manage GLP-1 prescribing for health plans, employers, and pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs). Their off-ramp is modeled after their Sustainable Weight Loss solution, Responsible Prescribing is designed as an alternative to GLP-1 drugs or as an off-ramp for patients moving off them to maintain their weight loss. Release

Virtual nursing provider VirtuAlly has received accreditation from The Joint Commission (JC). This relatively rare status for telehealth is based on continuous compliance with performance standards and commitment to providing safe and quality patient care. VirtuAlly provides 24/7 turnkey virtual nurse-patient monitoring, temporary virtual support, and consulting services. They also have added a new term to our lexicon, “tele-sitting”. Release 

A year’s end newsletter to our Readers: a few wishes for Under the Tree, a few Quirky Predictions for 2025

It’s hard for your Editor to believe, but this is actually the 15th year since Steve Hards was most kind and invited me to contribute a few articles to what was then simply Telecare Aware.

A lot has happened since then, professionally and personally. I’m grateful for the opportunity that TTA has given me to Cover the Healthcare Waterfront, relying on multiple sources from super-local to Mainstream News to the Usual Sources. 

Most of all, this forum (and it is one!) stays true to the course that now Editor Emeritus Steve set some years ago:

Telecare Aware’s editors concentrate on what we perceive to be significant events and technological and other developments in telecare and telehealth. We make no apology for being independent and opinionated or for trying to be interesting rather than comprehensive.

In that, though I’ve occasionally gone far afield (and down some rabbit holes) into exclusively US issues such as how healthcare gets paid, its politics, and the financial landscape (from bubble to devastation to recovery), I believe they hold true in the UK and in other countries. 

So one wish I have from Santa for 2025 is for More Comments. I’m very interested in knowing what you think about topics that are covered and your take on them. Using hits as a guide, it is hard to predict. Sometimes it is breaking news, a major data breach, or Walgreens’ continuing soap opera. Perhaps you want more audio commentary or article audio files, which I’ve experimented with via Soundcloud. So…What do you think?

A second wish: for other writers to join me here as lead/topic providers or better, contributors, for news outside the US. Specifically, I believe Readers want to know what is going on in the UK and Europe, but ‘standard sources’ are either not focused on health tech, paywalled, or overly specific ‘inside baseball’. Steve and I have long recommended Roy Lilley’s newsletter and UK Telehealthcare.

So…if you know of reporting on UK or EU issues, please direct me there. Better yet, contribute an article! Or two! We are small and cannot pay, but if the facts are there and the writing is sound, you’ll be published and can republish elsewhere. (This is exclusive of Perspectives, which are non-promotional thought pieces contributed by companies’ marketing areas. And we thank them!)

A third wish: speaking of marketing, I am a marketing and communications consultant by trade. Yet I am very shy about putting my shingle out there and asking Readers for leads to companies that might need marketing help, short-term or long term. My LinkedIn profile has most of my CV and key information on what I’ve done and where I’ve worked, but for a full overview about my capabilities across branding, program, planning, and products, email me here

Now for the Quirky Predictions–I’ll keep it short and open to debate:

2025 will continue international rebuilding of companies in healthcare and health tech. But the tear-downs will continue to clear the table. Overall, there’s optimism in the air with a new administration. It doesn’t feel like a rerun of 2023 where everyone thought it was going to be Romping Unicorns post-pandemic and the Big Guns were snapping up Big Buys like Signify Health and Oak Street Health for Big Bucks. We know now how that worked out for Walgreens, CVS, Walmart, and even Amazon (which I predict will be rethinking–and retrenching). We are starting from a low level and hopefully leveling up from there.

That doesn’t mean that there won’t be more Shotgun Mergers by VCs that avoid the new merger guidelines and a few Chapter 7s and 11s (UK=administration) along the way. There will be more layoffs. Funding rounds for both healthcare and digital health will be moderate. Down rounds that reduce valuation will still be with us. Investors will push for more control–witness what is happening at Walgreens and CVS, and what happened at Centene.  There will be more big changes at Walgreens, CVS, Elevance, Centene, Cigna, and many others considered mainstays of healthcare–and don’t rule out Amazon and Walmart. But by the end of year, barring a Bird Flu Pandemic, space aliens landing from the Plague of Drones in US and international skies, or an Unraveling of Sanity, overall we will be doing a lot better.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will be turning up the heat on Health. He will be confirmed as head of Health and Human Services and will, within a year, refocus it along its name. Health rather than Sick Care. A lot of substances ranging from vaccines to PFAS to various dyes and additives in food will be questioned at FDA, restricted, and brought to the national consciousness. As a personality, he is extremely intelligent and dynamic–knows how to absorb the most complex information and move on it. He knows that Make America Healthy Again is his Main Chance and also to be true to his legendary father’s legacy. It will make a lot of drug and chemical companies rather…nervous. (I am less sanguine about Dr. Mehmet Oz as head of CMS and his ability to clean up that puzzle palace, but hopeful.)

Speaking of heat, I wouldn’t want to be a C-level at any of the major health plans that are in multiple lines of integrated business.  The assassination of Brian Thompson and earlier the massive Change Healthcare hack ripped the cast and bandages off the entire system. The sheer hostility to payers was startling enough for UHG CEO Andrew Witty to write a massively defensive op-ed in the NY Times–and the hostility has hardly dimmed with the jailing of Luigi Mangione who has turned into a folk hero to some. (Yeesh! I cannot think of anything less moral.) The incoming administration and Congress are restive and major changes will be coming from there. Already there is a bipartisan Congressional bill (the PBM Bill) requiring the divestiture of pharmacy benefit management (PBM) companies from insurers within three years. While it will not be passed by the 118th Congress, it will be reintroduced by the 119th after 3 January if you look at who is backing it. This is the kind of movement to simplify how healthcare is delivered and paid for that crosses ideologies and finds a wide spectrum of support from Bernie Sanders to RFK, Jr. and presumably the re-elected President. 

Once the PBM string is pulled, what then comes into focus is insurer ownership and control of providers. UHG/Optum owns or is affiliated (meaning ACO or partial ownership) with 10% of US practices. DOJ is already after UHG for the Change Healthcare acquisition on security grounds. The more aggressive posture around anti-trust will not change in this administration and only slightly moderate with a new FTC chair. (Lina Khan’s term has expired though she may try to hang on, but her bête noire Amazon is still in trouble with their One Medical Bad Bet.)  The few payer organizations that only offer health plans, like Molina, Oscar, and Clover, will start to look very smart indeed. Perhaps smaller and less controlling is actually…better. And more profitable.

Running in parallel: the lack of trust in Big Pharma and the cost of drugs from them. They’re next.

We will need to get much more realistic about AI, what it is capable of, and its social effects. It is spreading into everything like kudzu (try entering into most browsers) but what we will be finding out is that a lot of what is ‘AI’ sold to companies as labor-saving is half-baked. It doesn’t work well. Some of it falls into the ‘uncanny valley’ of unease as too humanoid. If a company or service relies on it for decision making, it may not make those decisions better than humans. Reportedly UnitedHealthcare uses AI for a claims decision model, something that is cited as flawed. Bad decisions incite human anger, and lack of human contact is like being in a perpetual voice jail.

There is also growing evidence that in writing and researching, over-dependence on AI prompts and drafts destroys the ability to remember and creatively connect both on the fly and under consideration, in the ability to move an argument logically to a conclusion utilizing persuasive writing and speech skills. This especially affects the young. I’m hearing reports on this from the hiring front, where young grads cannot write without AI assistance and are stunted in their verbal skills. AI in writing gets to be a crutch (I use a tool for grammar–and about 10% of the time it’s off.). And have we forgotten that AI is dependent on content….GIGO from the early computing days still applies. We don’t want to be the Eloi, do we? (Look up your H.G. Wells)

And one last prediction. The mass market weight loss fad hyping GLP-1 drugs (Wegovy, Ozempic, Mounjaro, Zepbound) will implode. These drugs are now readily available, less expensive (but certainly not cheap), and cheerily advertised on social media, radio, and TV by drug manufacturers and telehealth prescribers. These are promoted for weight loss alone, not for weight loss to better manage Type II diabetes or true obesity. What will pop the bubble? Side effects of slow digestion like stomach paralysis. Diarrhea, nausea, intestinal distress, even pancreatitis and suicidal ideation. Little known is that 80-90% of clinical trial participants experienced at least one adverse event. If you survive these, a weight gain rebound often happens once off the injections.

The telehealth prescribers like Ro and Hims make it so easy–and do they go through blood and other testing, and histories, to ensure that the patient is a suitable candidate?  Metabolic modifications ain’t beanbag.

A side business popping up: nutritional  supplements and ‘special drinks’ to prevent malnutrition (because of the low food intake) and muscle loss. (Another sign that GLP-1 is hitting a peak.)

Perhaps waiting in the wings are the class action lawyers, ready to jump on any massive side effects or, God forbid, deaths.

No ‘craze’–and this is one–is unalloyed bliss. If you have a diversified telehealth company like Teladoc and you get into this business, it may not make a difference (?)–but sole providers like Calibrate (among many) will feel the pain. And destruction. (Does anyone remember the much-touted Alli/Orlistat that reduced the fat absorbed by the digestive tract and those side effects?)

May you and your loved ones have a Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, and a Happy New Year…however you and yours celebrate! We will be on a two-week break and return, along with many of you, on 6 January.