Midweek news roundup: Steward cancels hospital auction, investigations mount; GE HealthCare’s Intelligent Ultrasound $51M buy; $100M for Headway; $80M for CytoReason AI

Steward Health Care’s bankruptcy hits a wall. They canceled auctions for hospitals located in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Arkansas, and Louisiana according to documents filed last Sunday. They successfully had bids on one hospital each in the latter two states: Glenwood Regional Medical Center in Louisiana for $500,000, and Pafford Health Systems has bid on Arkansas-based Wadley Regional Medical Center for $200,000. The low prices reflect the assumption of the facilities’ existing liabilities. They will also exit rental agreements with Steward’s landlord arm, Medical Properties Trust. Most of the 31 Steward facilities are failing to find any interest, and Optum weeks ago exited its pre-bankruptcy bid for the practice arm, Stewardship Health. According to the filing, Steward will announce an alternate approach to the sales process. The debtors-in-possession, which provided financing to continue to operate the hospitals during the bankruptcy process, are awaiting. Healthcare Dive, FierceHealthcare

Three Senators demand an investigation into Steward’s practices. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Bill Cassidy MD (R-LA), and Ed Markey (D-MA). They are respectively the chairman, ranking member, and subcommittee on primary health chairman of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee. There will be a vote this busy week on subpoenaing CEO Ralph de la Torre about the financial arrangements leading up to its insolvency. Dr. de la Torre has refused previous requests to appear before the HELP committee. Becker’s, FierceHealthcare

The US Attorney’s office based in Boston has reportedly jumped into the Steward investigation act, citing fraud and violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act about its business dealings in Malta between 2018 and 2023. Steward operated three hospitals for the Maltese government and also engaged in a $7 million spy operation of its critics through its operation there. Malta stripped Steward of their hospital management contracts in 2023 [TTA 2 July]. CBS News 

M&A/funding roundup

GE HealthCare is buying Intelligent Ultrasound’s clinical AI software for a tidy $51 million. Intelligent Ultrasound is already partnering with GEHC with tools available on their Voluson Expert and Voluson Signature ultrasound devices. The buy is scheduled to close in Q4 and GEHC is funding with cash on hand. Intelligent will continue in business with software for ultrasound simulation technology. GEHC release, Healthcare Finance

Mental health remains hot with $100 million heading to Headway–more on this from last week’s sketchy reports. It’s not an unlettered round but a Series D. Also confirmed: their valuation is now $2.3 billion, surely making backers Spark Capital, a16z, Thrive Capital, Accel, and new investor Forerunner Ventures, most happy. The raise will be used for service expansions to all 50 states and to members in Medicare Advantage, commercial, and Medicaid plans. Headway closed a $125 million Series C round in droughty October 2023. Release,  Mobihealthnews

AI is even hotter, with Israeli startup CytoReason scoring $80 million in an unlettered round. CytoReason develops computational disease models for predictive asset insights, increasing the speed and accuracy of R&D decisions for biotech companies. It already has partnerships with Pfizer and three other pharmas, and claims six of the world’s top ten pharma companies use their technology for immunology, inflammation, immuno-oncology, metabolism, and other therapeutic areas. Funders are Pfizer, OurCrowd, NVIDIA and Thermo Fisher Scientific. They plan to open a US headquarters in Cambridge, Massachusetts later this year. Release, Mobihealthnews

Short takes: fundings for Huma, Truvian, Headway, ThymeCare, Freshpaint; Headspace’s new CEO; UK M&A RLDatix-Carebeans; Elevance earnings news, another Steward shocker; Meta’s Reality Labs AR unit sinking–is Meta?

Rounding up the fundings first, as signs of life persist through AI disruptions, hacking, and layoffs:

Huma, the former Medopad, now up to a Series D and over $322 million in total funding. The $80 million funding represents a share issuance. Funders included AstraZeneca, Hat Technology Fund 4 by HAT SGR, HV Fund by Hitachi Ventures and Leaps by Bayer. London/New York-based Huma’s last major round was in May 2021 with a jumbo $130 million Series C, not unusual for that time. That round had a $70 million add-on option; looking at Crunchbase, there was a corporate round of £25 million and a debt financing of $30 million between the Series C and D. In 2020, Huma renamed, relogo’d, and pivoted then from something ill-defined around predictive diagnostics to a platform that supports ‘hospital at home’ plus pharma and research companies in large, decentralized clinical trials.

With the funding, Huma also announced the Huma Cloud Platform, designed to benefit their own projects and those of digital health developers with a library of pre-built modules and device-connectivity capabilities. The platform is FDA Class II, EU MDR Class IIb and Saudi FDA Class C cleared.  Huma release, Mobihealthnews

Truvian Health, developer of an automated digital benchtop blood-testing and diagnostics system, scored a $74 million raise in a venture round. The round was led by Great Point Ventures and Wittington Ventures, with participation from existing investors Medical Excellence Capital, Tao Capital, DNS Capital, 7wireVentures and TYH Capital. The company has raised over $208 million through this round and a 2021 (!) $105 million Series C. Truvian’s analyzer is not FDA cleared as of yet and the raise will be used to obtain that clearance. Truvian is also partnering with Shoppers Drug Mart, Canada’s largest pharmacy, as a commercial partner, having worked with Truvian last year on an onsite evaluation versus standard lab testing. Echoes of Theranos, except that it may work?  Release, Mobihealthnews

Behavioral health platforms are still getting financing, with Headway benefiting from a $100 million unlettered venture round. Spark Capital led the round with previous investors participating including Thrive Capital, Accel, Andreessen Horowitz and Global Founders Capital for a total funding of $325 million and a $2.3 billion valuation. Their last round was a $125 million Series C in October 2023 which was pretty impressive in the middle of a funding drought. Reports are a little scarce including no mention on their website, but Behavioral Health Business has what’s available via Bloomberg News. Headway’s niche is exclusively partnering with health plans to provide members with therapy and psychiatry.

One of Headway’s competitors, Headspace, named a new CEO, Tom Pickett, as their new CEO, effective 12 August. He joins from DoorDash, where he served as chief revenue officer, which is quite a leap. Prior to that, he was in digital media and the US Navy as F/A-18 pilot and “Top Gun” graduate. Pickett replaces Russell Glass, who resigned in March. Headspace has had a rocky time of it versus competition, with layoffs of 15% last July and a $105 million senior debt financing to get by [TTA 27 July 2023]. Release

Value-based cancer care platform Thyme Care announced a capital raise of $95 million. The Series B round of equity funding was led by Concord Health Partners with participation from all existing investors, including CVS Health Ventures, Town Hall Ventures, a16z Bio + Health, AlleyCorp, Echo Health Ventures, Frist Cressey Ventures, and Foresite Capital. Adding to this was a $40 million debt financing from Banc of California. The fresh funding brings their total to $178 million. According to MedCityNews, “Thyme Care manages over half a billion dollars in medical spend through its risk-based contracts and anticipates tripling that amount within the next year. The company has also doubled its oncology partnerships in the last six months and intends to expand nationwide by securing new contracts with health plans, employers and primary care groups that bear financial risk”. Release, Mobihealthnews 

Freshpaint took a slightly different tack with its announcement of a $30 million Series B round. Their CEO/co-founder’s blog for this healthcare-focused performance marketing/data infrastructure security company interestingly asks the question why they decided to obtain additional financing. Well, they want to cover the waterfront (Editor’s term) of healthcare beyond hospitals to payers, other providers, and retail health. The financing was led by Threshold with additional participation from SignalFire, Intel Capital, Zero Prime, and Y Combinator. Their Series A back in November 2022 was a modest $9.5 million, for a total since their start of $42 million. 

On the M&A front, we have the UK’s RLDatix acquiring Carebeans. Transaction cost and staff transitions were not disclosed. The two systems will be integrated with single sign in. RLDatix is a healthcare operations platform that captures data across risk, safety, compliance, provider lifecycle and workforce management. Carebeans also provides care management services software primarily in the domicilary, care planning, supported care, and social care management sectors. Release

Elevance (the former Anthem) had a decent quarter. Their Q2 notched $2.3 billion in profit but the company turned around and lowered their full year guidance due to weakness in the health insurance business that reduced total revenue slightly to $43.2 billion. While beating Mr. Market, the ongoing weaknesses in the payer market have analysts seeing yellow and red flags. Elevance’s Medicaid enrollment declined 5%: 2.2 million to 45.8 million. As UHG stated in their earnings results, they are swimming against a general trend toward elevated utilization rates and higher acuity populations, particularly in Medicaid, which was offset by increased premiums. For Medicare Advantage, they believe their plans will benefit from CMS’ rerun of the Star ratings and balance out reimbursement cuts. Healthcare Dive, FierceHealthcare

As if the Steward Healthcare story couldn’t get any more seamy (not steamy–that was earlier this month), 14 executives paid themselves $1 million + salaries and bonuses in the year prior to the company’s Chapter 11. MedCityNews did the math on the bankruptcy filing addendum (Statement of Financial Affairs Amendment). The CEO earned a $3.7 million salary, the president of Steward Health Care a $1.73 million salary plus a $500,000 bonus, and the EVP for human resources a $842,000 salary with a $300,000 bonus. Extremely high C-level/EVP salaries in healthcare are not unusual even for smaller organizations, but Steward was in trouble plenty for some years, and being sued right and left by vendors for long-delayed payments and bouncing checks. You wonder what the debtors-in-possession will make of all of this

Last but certainly not least are reports of layoffs and major restructuring at Meta (Facebook)’s Reality Labs, which is their unit for augmented reality (AR)/virtual reality (VR) headset and software development unit. It’s now separated into two units, Wearables (headsets, glasses such as smart Ray-Bans) and Metaverse (platform and Quest headsets). Reports that are primarily paywalled have said that multiple leaders have been laid off from the company, with The Information (paywalled) stating the late June layoff affected a dozen VPs and directors. Teams also have to cut spending 20% by 2026, with the bulk of the cuts this year. Meta, despite billions in investment and Metaverse hype by Mark Zuckerberg including a corporate name change, has largely failed against Apple’s Vision Pro and others. ABPLiveEM360Tech

Whither Meta? An Editor’s Opinion: This Editor believes that Meta requires a real housecleaning which may be beyond the abilities or interests of its controlling shareholder. The Reality Labs reorganization resembles rearranging deck chairs on a listing ship as AR/VR users in healthcare invariably use Apple and other headsets. While claiming 175 million users of an X-like platform called Threads, does anyone actually use it? Facebook is suffering from an aging user base and Gen X defection. Ads are down in overall share though still around 10%. Effectiveness in the past few years is also dropping due to fatigue factor. As a Facebook admin for a non-profit organization, their tools feel a decade old–clunky and hard to use. Facebook Marketplace is a modest success as an e-commerce adjunct to Facebook, but resembles CraigsList. Zuckerberg seems to care more for his charities and political influence, so perhaps it’s time for him to leave management to others–and retire.  

Funding/new business roundup: General Catalyst’s HATco ‘health assurance’ venture and $6B portfolio merger, Brightside Health expands, Diana Health’s $34M, Headway’s $125M, Main Street Health’s $315M

With HLTH 2023 this week in Las Vegas, there’s the usual deluge of investment and ‘big news’ announcements, both before and during the conference.

HLTH’s Biggest and Somewhat Mystifying News (so far) is that Big Investor General Catalyst now is getting directly into the healthcare transformation business with HATco. The Health Assurance Transformation Corporation is a fully-owned company that will be in the business of “health assurance”, defined as “a more affordable, accessible and proactive system of care” which is a very broad brush indeed that sounds like the promise of value-based care and the Triple Aim (remember?). HATco already claims  20+ health system partners plus a large payer that accounts for about 15% of healthcare revenue and is in 43 states and four countries. They will be building an interoperability model with technology solutions that include a subset of their healthcare portfolio companies to drive this transformation. Their next big step will be actually acquiring and operating a health system to show how this health assurance can work. The new venture will be headed by Dr. Marc Harrison, former CEO of Intermountain Health, with a big assist from managing director Hemant Taneja, who previously founded data OS/EHR/workplace asset tracker and staff safety system Commure. Release, Mobihealthnews, FierceHealthcare 

Speaking of Commure, it is merging with another General Catalyst-funded company, Athelas. It seems like a skillful rationalization of two portfolio companies in health data and workflow data systems, including Commure’s PatientKeeper EHR, with Athela’s addition of revenue cycle management and sensor-based software for remote patient monitoring. The combined entity under the Commure name will be led by Athelas’ CEO and founder Tanay Tandon, with Commure’s CEO Ashwini Zenooz, MD moving into a non-executive director role on Commure’s board. Taneja will retain his executive chairman title. General Catalyst is investing additional funds, valuing it at $6 billion, oddly fanciful given the current environment and their revenue; the current Commure expects to finish the year with $100 million in contracted annual recurring revenue with the combined companies achieving a $125-150 million run rate by end of year. The transaction is expected to close at the end of October. Commure release, Athelas release

Telemental health’s Brightside Health doubles covered lives with additional Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries. These are from Optum–UnitedHealthcare Medicare Advantage members–plus new and expanded partnerships with Centene, Lucet (to serve Florida Blue members), and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas. This drives up in-network covered lives by 50 million to over 100 million (not actual users). Brightside offers personalized psychiatry, clinically proven therapy and Crisis Care (a program for those with elevated suicide risk) through these plans. Fun fact: based on a Brightside study published in Frontiers in Psychiatry, telemental health is effective for people with reported incomes under $30,000 per year. Healthcare Finance

Diana Health’s $34M Series B to nationally expand women’s health/OB-GYN digital health platform and care teams. Diana partners with health systems to offer women their tech-enabled services in maternity care–preconception and family planning, annual well woman visits, wellness coaching, and virtual and in-person classes and events. Their focus is on improvement of outcomes and women’s satisfaction with maternity care. Diana also has an in-person practice in Smyrna, Tennessee as well as arrangements with health system clinics in Springfield and Cookeville. The funding round was led by Norwest Venture Partners with existing investors .406 Ventures, LRVHealth, and AlleyCorp for a total of $46 million to date. Release, Mobihealthnews, MedCityNews

Telemental health is still simmering with Headway’s $125 million Series C and new unicorn status. Headway, which works exclusively with health plans to provide members with therapy and psychiatry, is now officially a $1 billion+ valued unicorn. This round was led by Spark Capital with Andreessen Horowitz, Accel, and Thrive. GV, which had participated earlier in the $70 million Series B round in May 2021 plus the late 2020 Series A of $26 million, was absent. Funds will be used to go national and equip their providers with new technology and tools. FierceHealthcare, Mobihealthnews

Topping it off, rural health service provider Main Street Health scored a jumbo investment of $315M in new capital. Investors include Oak HC/FT as well as five of the largest national Medicare Advantage plans. Main Street equips rural partner clinics with Health Navigators who assist the clinic’s providers with patient care coordination, such as med pickup reminders, scheduling visits post-hospital discharge, scheduling preventative screenings, and assisting with social determinants of health (SDOH) services. They plan to expand to 26 states from the current 18. A typical clinic is located in a town of 3,000 to 5,000 people and has 2.5 providers, making this additional outsourced service valuable indeed. Release, FierceHealthcare