Need to knows: Omada’s $158M IPO at flat valuation, AZ lawsuit on Centene plan’s ‘ghost network’ fatality, UHG shareholders OK reduced package for CEO Hemsley, new ASTP/HIT-ONC leader, NJ’s Cooper Health patient data breach, Net Health buys Limber Health

Omada Health nears a dip in the chilly IPO waters. Chronic care manager Omada Health started last week to road-show its long-anticipated public offering to interested investors. It’s been a long time in the making, with their first IPO S-1 filing back in October 2024.   Their 9 May SEC Form S-1 registration and preliminary prospectus, updated 29 May in their S-1/A, now reveals the extent of the offering–7.9 million shares. With an initial offering price of $18-$20/share, that is a raise of $142.2 to $158 million for OMDA (Nasdaq Global Market). The IPO may take place later this week, according to CNBC, with other sources saying Friday 6 June.

Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs & Co., and JP Morgan are acting as lead book-running managers for the proposed offering–a high-level crew for what was in the past a relatively small offering, but times have certainly changed with a dearth of IPOs continuing. 

Omada has raised $528.5 million through 11 rounds since the Ur-Health days of 2011, with a $192 million Series E in 2022 and the last round in 2023 an $80 million debt financing (Crunchbase). Investments came from major VCs such as Andreessen Horowitz, Fidelity, Norwest Venture Partners, Wellington Management, Intermountain, New Enterprise Associates, and Founder Collective. Their repositioning into ‘between-visit care model’ expanding from diabetes into obesity, hypertension, and MSK patients has met with success. With 2,000+ customers and over 679,000 total members enrolled in one or more programs, their 2024 revenue grew 38% from $122.8 million in 2023 to $169.8 million in 2025 , with Q1 2025 by 57% to $55.0 million from Q1 2024’s $35.1 million. Their prospectus revealed that they are closely tied to investor Cigna, with one health plan or PBM accounting for 31% of revenue, then a second health plan or PBM accounted for 29% of its revenue. according to FierceHealthcare. 

Unlike much-larger Hinge Health, Omada isn’t taking a valuation haircut, just a small trim when adjusted for inflation. The market capitalization versus valuation at its last letter raise is essentially flat: $1.1 billion versus $1.02 billion. Omada release, Mobihealthnews, Axios

Centene’s Health Net/Ambetter hit with ‘ghost network’ lawsuit on member fatality. Finding out that your provider isn’t in network is usually an annoyance, though it can be an expensive one. In this case, the consequences were fatal. 36-year-old Ravi Coutinho purchased an Affordable Care Act plan through Ambetter in 2023 and was being treated for mental health and addiction treatment in Phoenix. Both Coutinho and his mother, Barbara Webber, tried to find therapists who contracted with Arizona Ambetter who met Coutinho’s needs. Ambetter failed repeatedly, Coutinho’s condition deteriorated without care, and he was found dead in his apartment in 2023.

Ms. Webber filed a lawsuit last month in Maricopa County. Centene is accused of violating state and federal laws requiring network accuracy and adequacy, as well as negligence and fraud. Keeping provider networks current, especially in ACA plans, has been a known problem for years and under Congressional investigation. Studies from 2023 have indicated that 80% of provider listings contain inaccuracies, with only one-third of provider listings contacted by Senate subcommittee staffers were accurate. This is especially acute in mental health, with a shocking 3 in 4 insured adults who receive mental healthcare experience insurance problems, according to a 2023 survey (KFF). Health plans receive no incentives to keep their network listings current and accurate, though the ACA, state and other Federal laws such as the ‘No Surprises Act’ require plans to keep accurate lists of network providers. This also is not the first roundup on this issue for Centene’s plans. Healthcare Dive, FierceHealthPayer

UHG’s Stephen Hemsley will be seeing a pay cut, compared to his predecessor. UnitedHealth Group’s shareholders on Monday approved a compensation package for their new CEO. Mr. Hemsley will receive a base salary of $1 million per year. For stock options, he will receive only a one-time, $60 million equity award in nonqualified stock options with cliff vesting in three years. There will be no further awards for three years. It’s expected that Mr. Hemsley, 73, who was board chairman, will not remain CEO for the long term in this second round in the top spot. Another task he has is to find a leader who enjoys investor confidence–and who is capable of leading the company through what this Editor considers to be an inevitable change of model, likely a downsizing.

Shareholders are cutting the comp, not quite the 50% that the shares have fallen. This is considerably less than Sir Andrew Witty’s $26.3 million package for 2024, which was top of the pack from 2022 on. That year’s compensation started with a $1.5 million base salary, plus $17.25 million in stock options and $5.75 million in option awards. He also received $1.5 million in non-equity compensation plus ‘other’ of $339,000. Whether he will enjoy all of this based on 2024’s disappointing performance is not disclosed, as he resigned effective 13 May 2025 after Q1 results and a suspended forecast for 2025 were disclosed. Runner-up was Karen Lynch, who departed CVS Health last year but with a comp package of $23.4 million. FierceHealthcare 2 June, 12 May

Short takes:

The Trump Administration has named Thomas Keane, a software engineer and interventional radiologist, as Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy, formerly the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC). According to his ASTP bio, Dr. Keane previously served in ASTP and also as a Senior Advisor to the Deputy Secretary of HHS. Among other duties, he was an administrator of the COVID-19 Provider Relief Fund and lead the development of the AHRQ National Nursing Home COVID Action Network. ASTP oversees Federal technology, data and artificial intelligence policy. More changes may be coming as Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will be reorganizing most areas of HHS. FedScoop, Healthcare Dive

Moving north to Camden, NJ, last March the Cooper Health system detected a data breach dating back to 2024. Personal health information (PHI) was apparently “accessed and acquired” without permission by an unknown actor around 14 May 2024. Abnormal network activity was noticed at the time and their systems were secured. However, the incident review which wrapped in March 2025 confirmed the PHI acquisition and Cooper has since notified the suspected individuals. Information accessed on individuals may include names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, health insurance information, treatment information, medical record numbers. and medical history information. Mobihealthnews

Net Health acquires Limber Health. Net Health, a provider of specialized EHR software plus diagnostic and predictive analytics, including wound care and rehabilitation, is adding Limber Health’s MSK remote therapeutic monitoring and analytics to its platform. Acquisition cost was not disclosed but from the release at least some of the team will be transferring over to Net Health’s Pittsburgh team. Net Health is a 35-year-old portfolio company of The Carlyle Group, Level Equity, and Silversmith Capital Partners. Limber’s last raise was a $16 million Series A in October 2022 from Glenview Capital Management, Ironwood Ventures, and The Blue Venture Fund. (Crunchbase).  Release

Weekend news roundup: GE Healthcare spins off, adds CTO; Allscripts now Veradigm; NHS Brainomix AI stroke trial success; Withings home urine scanner; Careficient buys Net Health EMR; CommonSpirit’s class action suit on data breach

GE Healthcare now trading on its own. On Wednesday, GEHC rang Nasdaq’s traditional opening bell virtually on its first day of trading Wednesday (4 Jan). The bell ringing was unique as the first company in Wisconsin to do so from their plant in Waukesha. GE retained approximately 19.9% of the outstanding shares of GE HealthCare common stock with the remaining 80.1% distributed to current GE shareholders. Today it closed at $58.95 and remains headquartered in Chicago. (It moved from Amersham UK back in 2016.) Management is now independent, with Peter Arduini as CEO and adding yesterday a new chief technology officer, Taha Kass-Hout MD, MS, from Amazon’s health AI area to lead the company’s new science and technology organization through their four areas: Imaging, Ultrasound, Patient Care Solutions, and Pharmaceutical Diagnostics. Release, Yahoo Finance  Also Mobihealthnews

Remember back in 2019 when problematic EHR Practice Fusion was renamed Veradigm? Allscripts has now renamed the entire company as Veradigm, after expanding it to analytics and research. After two years of reorganizing and downsizing (plus paying off Practice Fusion fines), selling off their hospital/large practice EHRs to Constellation Software/N. Harris Group for $700 million last May, the slimmed-down Veradigm Network encompasses electronic health records, practice management systems, and patient communication platforms. Interestingly, a search first leads you to a main corporate website under Allscripts and doesn’t forward automatically to Veradigm, making this a softer-than-usual name change. Now Veradigm can pick up a few companies on the market, as they announced last year. Release    Hat tip to HISTalk

NHS using Brainomix AI to diagnose stroke faster, tripled near-full recoveries to 48%.  The key finding: patients diagnosed using AI made near full recoveries increased from 16 to 48%. The trial of e-Stroke Suite took place in 22 hospital trusts in England across 111,000 suspected stroke patients. The AI in the e-Stroke Suite cut average diagnosis to treatment time by an hour from 140 to 79 minutes. The AI technology was developed by UK company Brainomix. Daily Mail, Oxford Academic Health Science Network case study (Note: Oxford AHSN, Brainomix, and Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust (RBH) are partners in the National Consortium of Intelligent Medical Imaging (NCIMI).)

Withings is debuting the U-Scan, an in-home urinalysis device, at CES. The 90 mm device sits in the toilet bowl and uses cartridges to analyze urine components, sending results to the Withings Health Mate app. Cartridges for Europe so far are Cycle Sync for menstrual period tracking and ovulation windows, and Nutri Balance for hydration and nutrition. Nutri Balance analyzes specific gravity, pH, vitamin C, and ketone levels. The U-Scan will debut in Europe at the end of Q2, with the U-Scan starter kit priced at €499.95.  Both await FDA clearance. Withings U-Scan page, Mobihealthnews

Careficient buys Net Health’s home health/hospice EMR. Careficient already is present in the home health, hospice and home care cloud EMR market. Net Health is selling its home health, hospice, home care and palliative solutions EMR, marketed under HealthWyse and Hospicesoft, as well as its revenue cycle management (RCM) division, to concentrate on wound care and rehabilitation therapy. This expands Careficient’s client base by 750 locations in 39 states. Transaction cost was not disclosed. Release

Add to the cost of hacking multiple class action lawsuits. CommonSpirit Health, based in Chicago and the second largest health system in the US covering 21 states under CHI and Dignity Health names, not only has to remedy a massive 600,000 patient data breach discovered last October [TTA 3 Dec], but also fight a class action lawsuit filed 29 December by a patient in the US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. Financial, health insurance, and medical information were all breached. The suit requests damages exceeding $5 million and injunctive relief, including stronger data protection practices. It will be the first of many as a quick search indicates multiple law firms seeking claimants. FierceHealthcare, WGNRadio