TTA Where *Is* Spring? 3: SPACs–why they cracked, Hinge Health and FTC-PBM delays, Transcarent’s tune change, UK’s pivot on NHS research data, why OpenAI is losing its way, more!

 

11 April 2025

It’s still a chilly Spring in your Editor’s whereabouts, but we have, fresh out of the hothouse, a bumper crop of news and opinion. The big read for the weekend is Halle Tecco’s quantifying of the Cracked SPAC phenomenon and what’s happened with OpenAI. Transcarent closes its Accolade buy and changes its tune to ‘one place’, Walgreens doing a bit better. In touting, Keir Starmer’s bet on NHS data research and Elon Musk on human trials for Neuralink Blindsight. Hinge Health may postpone its long-awaited IPO and FTC pauses its long-awaited toss of the book at PBMs. Plus a new Perspectives on rural healthcare and telehealth.

The weekend read: why SPACs came, went, and failed in digital health–the Halle Tecco analysis/memorial service; why OpenAI is going to be a bad, bad business (Grab the cuppa and lunch for a good read and podcast) 

Extra, extra!: ATA Action forms Virtual Foodcare Coalition, Ophelia and Spring Health partner on opioid treatment, ISfTeH renews NSA status with WHO (More action from ATA Action and a partnership to watch in telementalhealth)

Midweek roundup: Transcarent closes Accolade; Walgreens beats Street; New Mountain Capital’s Office Ally buy-in; Neuralink Blindsight human trial coming up; PM Keir Starmer touts NHS data research; FTC’s PBM litigation break (Transcarent’s pivot?)

Rock Health’s digital health Q1: more money, fewer deals, more additions and partnerships in ‘leapfrogging’ (Still in a minor key this year)

News roundup: Hinge Health may postpone IPO, Rite Aid may enter 2nd bankruptcy, Veterans Affairs committees want new EHR costs & timeline, fired Texas health plan head hired private eyes to spy on members, providers, lawmakers (The last one is shocking)

Perspectives: Bridging the Gap in Rural Healthcare Through Telehealth (From Yosi Health)

Last week: A relatively light news week in a so-far chilly, stormy Spring. Our top article is not one, but two dives into the Unicorn Known as Hippocratic AI. 23andMe’s sale isn’t attracting a lot of buyers (deliberate?) but presents even more problems for the users who took their surveys. Dr. Oz confirmed for CMS as HHS goes on a GLP-1 diet and then some. VA adds to their Oracle 2026 rollout, ATA Action enlarges, and DOJ seeks execution for Brian Thompson’s assassin.

News roundup: 9 additional VA centers named for Oracle 2026 EHR rollout; ATA Action acquiring, expanding with DTA; Dr. Oz to lead CMS while HHS cuts; DOJ seeks death penalty for Mangione  (VA creeps forward, ATA Action enlarges, HHS chops, justice awaits)
Are Hippocratic AI and AI “nurses” the wave of the future–or just another tide of hype? Two articles question. (A needed discussion on this particular unicorn and whether its AI capabilities are all they’re pitched to be)
23andMe’s slim list of prospective buyers–who must uphold privacy policies, according to the FTC. But what about that survey information? *Updated* (More problems with 23andMe’s sale–and if you took their surveys, they have more data on you)

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

Rock Health’s digital health Q1: more money, fewer deals, more additions and partnerships in ‘leapfrogging’

There’s a small uptick and some optimism in the air for US digital health deals after all. After a 2024 that realistically was a ‘down round’ or Back To 2019, 2025 is picking its way through the New Reality of Global 52-Card Pickup, powered by a new US government and still-defining AI technology. Let’s unpack what Q1 was like in Rock Health’s view:

  • Funding was $3.8 billion across 122 deals, with an average deal size of $24.4 million. Compared to Q1 2024, total investment was up ($2.7 billion) as was the average size ($20.6 million) but number of deals were down (133).
  • Q1 funding also exceeded Q4 2024 funding in a pattern typical of the past few years.
  • 83% of deals were seed, Series A, and Series B rounds, not much different than 2024’s 86%. There were a few exceptions listed by Rock Health. By far the largest was Hippocratic AI’s $141M Series B but also Achira’s $33M seed, and Open Evidence’s $75M Series A. MSK player Vori Health sported a $53 million Series B in March
  • There were only 5 Series D or larger deals but three were jumbo sized: Innovaccer ($275M), Abridge ($250M), and Qventus ($105M), which pulled the average up to $105 million, nearly double that of FY 2024.

Rock Health is mum on unlabeled or funding not disclosed deals, such as the ones TTA noted through the quarter: Summer Health -Caraway, Neuroflow-Quartet Health, Iris Telehealth-InnovaTel, Dispatch Health-Medically Home, and Wysa-April Health.  It also doesn’t provide its usual analysis of healthcare value propositions and clinical indicators.

An interesting analysis in the shorter-than-usual announcement breaks down an approach they’ve dubbed ‘leapfrogging’, defined as ways companies can acquire knowledge or shift to respond to market dynamics:

  1. Tapestry Weaving. It’s a quaint way of saying that capabilities can be bought through M&A. (Business can be bought that way too–Transcarent closed its $621 million buy of enterprise care navigator Accolade today.) 
  2. Modular Tech Stacks. This type of tech design allows companies to switch out or add in tech as the market changes or better tech emerges.
  3. Channel Partnerships. Companies, by adding partners, add capability at low cost and reach, though the logistics of partnering, the integration cost and quality of service aren’t easy lifts.
  4. Engaging Disruptors. Companies invested in certain standard processes can expand by allying with their disruptors, versus viewing them as competitors. 

What’s not mentioned in the report are the high profile failures this quarter: 23andMe’s bankruptcy, Walgreens’ sale to Sycamore Partners, and Veradigm’s failure to sell itself.  Given the past few months, we’ll be doing a lot of ’embracing uncertainty’ this year!  Also FierceHealthcare