News roundup: (breaking) IKS Health finalizes TruBridge buy, Hims shares rise on independent Rx fills, Cala Health scores $50M, Joyful Health $22M, Tava Health $40M, actor Jeremy Renner partners with RapidSOS

Breaking: IKS Health finalized their acquisition agreement with TruBridge, Inc. Today’s (23 Apr) announcement did not contain an acquisition price, but IKS is offering shareholders $26.25 per share, a small premium above today’s close at $25.27. Both are revenue cycle management (RCM) companies and will strengthen capabilities in the rural and community hospital markets. Since TruBridge is publicly traded on Nasdaq with 14.91 million shares outstanding, the deal is a minimum of $391.4 million, considerably less than the rumored $675 million [TTA 15 Apr]. TruBridge’s largest shareholders (27%) have agreed to terms, but it is subject to the usual regulatory reviews with an expected closing in Q3. Otherwise, the press release is short on details, but IKS will finance the TruBridge buy with debt financed by Citibank, JP Morgan Chase, and Deutsche Bank.

The unstoppable Hims & Hers notches another rise with wider GLP-1 med access. Hims announced a deal with Eli Lilly to fulfill Zepbound prescriptions via Lilly Direct. It also permits its providers to prescribe medications that are fulfilled by independent pharmacies, which essentially opens Hims up to all GLP-1 drugs, with restrictions of course.

Once largely wedded to compounded weight loss drugs, to the point of running commercials on 2025’s Super Bowl that their obesity drugs are priced “for profits, not patients”, Hims & Hers has flipped the script in less than a year to be the online prescriber of nearly all brand name weight loss drugs. This started about five months after the Super Bowl when FDA finalized the ban on compounding those drugs. Pretty soon Hims was inking deals, starting with Novo Nordisk in May 2025 to prescribe Wegovy and fulfill through NovoCare Pharmacy. In March, they settled their long-running legal tiff with Novo when they agreed to drop their just-debuted compounded pill to sell Novo’s Wegovy and Ozempic in both pill and injectable versions.  (The newest Lilly weight loss med, Foundayo, is only available DTC from them and commercial insurance/cash pay only.) Hims is up to $28/share. Sherwood News

News of raises for some interesting companies came thick and fast the latter part of the week

Wearable neuromodulator developer Cala Health gained $50 million in an unlettered raise. Unusually, it had a sole funder, Trinity Capital. Cala has developed the only FDA-cleared 510(k) wearable for action hand tremor in people with essential tremor and Parkinson’s disease. The funding will be used to scale commercial distribution and product development. The kIQ device uses transcutaneous afferent patterned stimulation (TAPS), which reduces hand tremors by measuring a patient’s tremor pattern and delivering individualized nerve stimulation. Prior rounds were in 2024 ($50 million), $77 million in 2021, and a $55 million Series B in 2019. Trinity Capital release, Mobihealthnews

Joyful Health, a financial operating system for providers, raised a $17 million Series A for a total of $22 million. It is designed as a claims denial intelligence and recovery infrastructure to work within an existing revenue cycle management system and connect claims data. The round was led by CRV with participation from seed investors XYZ Venture Capital, Designer Fund, Inflect Capital (the healthcare investment arm of Vituity, the largest physician-owned partnership in the United States), and Go Global Ventures (led by Commure founder Diede van Lamoen). Providers lose over $125 billion annually in lost revenue from unpaid or denied claims.  Joyful Health blog, Yahoo Finance

Back in the popular stomping grounds of telemental health, Tava Health raised a $40 million Series C. Tava, based in Salt Lake City, markets a  behavioral health platform to providers, employers, and health plans. It also announced three new products: Symphony for providers, TavaCare for the employer market, and Tava Guide for health plans, health systems, and care coordinators. Approximately 5,000 mental health providers are a part of the Tava Health network. Investors were led by Centana Growth Partners with participation from Catalyst Investors, Blue Heron Ventures, Peterson Ventures, and Springtide Ventures. Tava has raised $73 million since 2020 with its last raise in 2024. Yahoo Finance (release), Behavioral Health Business, Mobihealthnews

And an interesting partnership

Popular actor Jeremy Renner is partnering with public safety and first responder platform RapidSOS NYC (!)-based RapidSOS originally specialized in the technical aspects of public 911 systems and then developed integrations to link data from over 350 million connected devices, apps, and sensors directly to 911 centers and first responders. Increasingly, these integrations are AI-powered and even incorporate drones. Mr. Renner relates very well to first responders, having his own near-death experience on New Year’s Day 2023 where his snowcat machine rolled over and crushed him, breaking 38 bones along with blunt chest trauma. He is the focus of a 30-second documentary leading up to next Wednesday’s (29 April) premiere of Behind the Emergency. He is not only helping to tell their development story from his experience, but also as a partner plus investor. Mobihealthnews 

Short takes: HHS forms NIH/CMS autism data project; Oscar Health beats Street w/Q1 $275M net; Centene’s $1.3B earnings; UHG has class action suit on earnings, 1K AI apps in production; Cedars-Sinai and Redesign Health partner on development; FDA, Lilly, Novo Nordisk win vs. compounders

NIH, CMS to create autism data platform to enable research. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), both under Health & Human Services (HHS), are partnering to enable NIH to build a real-world data platform. The purpose is to advance research around the root causes of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) that now affects 1 in 31 US children, according to HHS. The data gathered include claims data, electronic medical records, and consumer wearables focused on Medicare and Medicaid enrollees with a diagnosis of ASD. The first step establishes a data use agreement under CMS’ Research Data Disclosure Program.

Researchers will focus on autism diagnosis trends over time, health outcomes from specific medical and behavioral interventions, access to care and disparities by demographics and geography, plus the economic burden on families and healthcare systems.

The pilot program, intended to be a model for other conditions, will create a secure tech-enabled mechanism to enhance data sharing with timely, privacy and security compliant data exchange.  HHS release, FierceHealthcare

Payers, other than UnitedHealth, had an upbeat Q1.

  • Oscar Health, the feisty provider of ACA exchange individual and small group plans, notched a Q1 net income of $275 million with adjusted EBITDA of $329 million on revenue of $3 billion, up 42% from Q1 2024. Membership exceeded 2 million, up 41% from prior year. The ever-feisty CEO Mark Bertolini (center) railed on the earnings call against a shortened Federal enrollment period cutting off at 15 December versus January, as well as other enrollment changes. Oscar release, FierceHealthcare
  • Centene Corporation, one of the main rivals to UnitedHealth Group and a significant player in Medicaid state plans, had a decent Q1 turnaround with $1.3 billion in earnings and a  17% jump in premium and service revenues to $42.5 billion from $36.3 billion in Q1 2024. Their current membership versus Q1 prior year was down about 500,000 with the losses in Medicaid and traditional Medicare. They also increased their 2025 premium and service revenues guidance range by $6.0 billion to a range of $164.0 billion to $166.0 billion due to ACA exchange plans and Medicare Advantage (MA) revenue forecast performance. However, it’s projected by analysts that Centene will exit the Medicare Advantage market after this year in Alabama, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Rhode Island and Vermont–about 3% of MA membership. CEO Sarah London criticized proposed cuts to Medicaid. Centene release, HealthcareFinance
  • UnitedHealth Group, after an anemic Q1 financial report driven by increased utilization and rising costs, cut its 2025 earnings per share (EPS) guidance by 12% to between $26 and $26.50 (Healthcare Dive). This just in: a shareholder group filed in Federal Court in the Southern District of New York on violations of securities laws affecting share price. It centers on the 2025 financial guidance provided prior to Brian Thompson’s assassination and how group CEO Andrew Witty did not account for: 1) the impact of that act but doubled down on the EPS forecast, 2) the increased scrutiny around the company for denials of claims even prior to the act, and 3) the general ill will generated as more information reached the general public. The affected group are those shareholders purchasing UHG stock between 3 December 2024 and 16 April 2025. Healthcare Dive, SDNY filing
  • Meanwhile, UHG has doubled down on AI development, totaling over 1,000 apps. According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, the company has these apps in production in their health delivery and pharmacy units, transcribing conversations from clinician visits, summarizing data, helping process claims, powering customer-facing chatbots, and in engineering to write software. According to chief digital and technology officer Sandeep Dadlani, half of the apps use generative AI and the remainder a more “traditional” form, without explanation of “traditional”. According to Dadlani in the article, “AI has a role to play in the claims evaluation process, but it will never be allowed to deny a claim”. Software, not necessarily AI powered but usually rules-based or using algorithms, ‘auto adjudicate’ 90% of UHG claims. UHG was sued in Federal Court as far back as 2023 in using an AI-powered application to evaluate and deny claims.

Redesign Health gets freshened up with a Cedars-Sinai partnership. Redesign Health is a combination funder and company builder which has launched over 60 healthcare-related companies, some clear successes such as Calibrate (weight loss) and Jasper Health (cancer care navigation), with others on the development curve such as Vault Health and Uptiv Health. They announced a partnership with the Cedars-Sinai health system in Los Angeles to add their clinical expertise and innovative research. Other strategic value additions through the new partnership are tapping into funding support, access to clinical environments within Cedars-Sinai’s network, and their dataset for validation of technologies and design. Redesign release

And in the pharma compounders versus Big Pharma war, the former have lost two battles. The compounder’s trade group, the Outsourcing Facilities Association (OFA), had separate lawsuits filed in Texas to force the FDA to reclassify both tirzepatide and semaglutide as still in shortage, which would permit compounding pharmacies to produce weight loss drugs with these active ingredients. The Texas judge found yesterday (7 May) for both FDA and Eli Lilly, the producer of Zepbound, that tirzepatide was no longer in shortage, which closed the door on the OFA. At the end of April, the same Federal judge ruled against the continued compounding of semaglutide, the active drug in Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy and Ozempic [TTA 27 Feb]. 22 May is the end date for the large compounding pharmacies for semaglutide, while smaller state-based compounders must cease immediately. Biospace 8 May, 25 April  Novo Nordisk’s new partnerships for Wegovy-based weight loss prescribing: TTA 1 May, 8 May