TTA’s Blooming Spring 2: Teladoc buys UpLift to buck up BetterHealth, Novo Nordisk partners with Hims, other teleprescibers on Wegovy, Masimo’s former CEO claiming un-granted shares, Commure-HealthTap partner, more!

2 May 2025

Cherry blossoms are starting to fall, much like Teladoc’s revenue for Q1 in our lead story. Can their acquisition of a small virtual mental health provider with insurance coverage help turn around BetterHelp? And what about their main business? Novo Nordisk would rather partner than fight with teleprescribers Hims & Hers, Ro, and LifeMD for GLP-1 Wegovy–will this be a trend? Commure adds to its ‘house that Jack built’ tech stack with a HealthTap partnership. And Masimo’s latest episode of its ongoing soap opera is that its former CEO (and major shareholder) is claiming ownership of shares as part of his severance–but they haven’t been granted and very much in dispute. (Irony alert: they’ve increased in value since his departure!)

This just in: Teladoc acquires UpLift for $30M, bolstering struggling BetterHelp telemental health; Q1 revenue down 3% (Can this telemental health be saved with one acquisition?)

News roundup: Hims, Ro, LifeMD and Novo Nordisk partner on Wegovy prescribing (updated); Commure partners with HealthTap for virtual care after hours; WebMD Ignite adds texting to member health ed; hellocare.ai raises $47M for virtual nursing  (When you can’t beat ’em in weight loss meds, join ’em. With a side of Commure’s interesting M.O. on acquisitions.)

Masimo updates: former CEO Kiani claims 13.2% ownership, and a review of the new management’s style (updated) (The soap opera continues)

From last week: Cherry blossoms are blooming (finally) and so is the news. The roundups include Walgreens’ continuing Aisle 9 cleanup of their Federal opioid prescribing allegations, a huge and mysterious breach of Google Analytics sending Blue Shield CA member info to Google Ads, and Veradigm’s interim CEO will be taking the summer off. Our big reads include two surveys: the first on the state of healthcare AI (more show than go) and the second on RPM utilization–and effectiveness. Two raises, a BCI/telehealth merge, and international initiatives.

Product & funding very short takes: South Australia 1st with Sunrise EMR; S. Korea pain research, new emergency services app; BCI + telehealth for stroke patients; VirtuSense monitoring launches at Emory; Series B raises for Nourish, Healthee

Short takes: Veradigm’s interim CEO departing, Blue Shield CA breached 4.8M members’ PHI to Google, advice on expanded M&A premarket notification rules (You can’t blame that CEO for ankling after all the trouble he’s seen! And Blue Shield has 2nd largest breach–involving Google Analytics. Bad timing for Google.)

News roundup: Walgreens’ $350M opioid settlement, only 30% of healthcare AI pilots reach production, Medicare RPM usage up 10-fold despite benefit limitations (Walgreens cleans up again, and two surveys on AI and RPM for weekend perusal)

Holding this over: 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. Updated–Also Tecco’s blog post on why she quit being an angel investor.) 

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This just in: Teladoc acquires UpLift for $30M, bolstering struggling BetterHelp telemental health; Q1 revenue down 3%

Teladoc closed out a down Q1 with buying UpLift. The $30 million acquisition is clearly strategic in bolstering BetterHelp, their floundering direct-to-consumer mental health provider. It closed on 30 April, the same day as Teladoc’s Q1 results call. UpLift was bought in an all-cash transaction, with up to $15 million in additional contingent earnout consideration. UpLift’s 2024 revenue was approximately $15 million. It is small compared to BetterHelp’s Q1 revenue of $239.9 million, which fell 11% versus Q1 2024 and continuing a decrease from Q4 2024, when its revenue was $250 million, after sinking through the entire fiscal year. 

What UpLift adds is insurance-reimbursable mental health coverage with all major commercial insurers, including Medicare and Medicaid, something that the cash-pay-only BetterHelp lacked. It also adds coverage of 100 million lives and a network of over 1,500 mental health providers. According to the release, BetterHelp will work with its customers to help them access insurance coverage. Their network providers will “have an opportunity to be considered for inclusion in the benefits coverage network, based on the respective requirements, needs and interests”, which is an interesting way to present it.

Teladoc said in the release  and on the earnings call that UpLift will be reported under BetterHelp’s results, although it will be run separately under its current CEO Kyle Talcott. There is no further indication as to management transitions. The impression given from the release at least in the short term is that it will be run separately for management of their provider network, quality and patient outcome oversight and the acceptance and administration of insurance coverage. 

What does this mean? How much of a lift UpLift will give this year to BetterHelp is anyone’s guess, but adding insurance coverage is a much needed move by Teladoc, given BetterHelp’s expensive DTC cash model.

  • Teladoc has known for some time that lack of insurance coverage was a key part of BetterHelp’s performance problems. UpLift will help in that regard.
  • In the past 18 months, it moved from Teladoc’s great hope, one which former CEO Jason Gorevic bet ‘large’ on only for him to depart in a haze of red ink [TTA 5 Apr 2024], to a slowly eroding asset or worse, a rolling failure. It is particularly inexplicable given the growth of virtual mental health.
  • In the past year, BetterHelp operations were responsible for a $790 million impairment that hit Teladoc’s Q2 and a nasty, embarrassing rap by short seller Blue Orca Capital on ChatGPT being used in therapeutic responses [TTA 25 Feb], vigorously denied by Teladoc [TTA 25 Feb]. 
  • BetterHelp’s revenue for the remainder of 2025 is expected to shrink by up to 9.75%.

The main Teladoc operation, segmented as Integrated Care, also performs virtual mental health care within its services. This is noted in the release: “Teladoc Health’s Integrated Care segment offers a range of digital tools, coaching, therapy, and psychiatry services for employers and health plans (Editor’s emphasis), and completed nearly a million mental health visits in 2024.” Since those virtual mental health services are within Integrated Care, its performance is not public. 

Is a real solution a rebranding of BetterHelp when it is integrated (as it eventually will be) with UpLift?

HIT Consultant, FierceHealthcare, Mobihealthnews

Teladoc Q1 financial highlights:

There wasn’t much encouragement across the board in Teladoc’s Q1 report.

  • Total Q1 revenue decreased 3% to $629.4 million from prior year’s $646.1 million in First Quarter 2024
  • The bright spot was that their main business under Integrated Care had a revenue increase of 3% to $389.5 million 
  • As mentioned, BetterHelp’s revenue decreased by 11% to $239.9 million
  • By domestic versus international, US revenue decreased 4% to $525.0 million. International revenue grew 6% to $104.4 million.
  • Net loss also increased to $93.0 million, or $0.53 per share, versus prior year’s Q1 $81.9 million, or $0.49 per share.
  • Adjusted EBITDA for Q1  decreased 8% to $58.1 million, versus $63.1 million in the prior year. \
    • Integrated Care’s adjusted EBITDA increased 6% to $50.4 million.
    • BetterHelp’s adjusted EBITDA decreased 50% to $7.7 million.

The release also confirms full year 2025 revenue projections of $2,468 – $2,576 million. BetterHelp’s revenue is projected to continue to shrink by 3.75 to 9.75%.

Humanoid robots and virtual humans in the ‘uncanny valley’

[grow_thumb image=”https://telecareaware.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/uncanny_2.jpg” thumb_width=”150″ /]One of the challenges that designers of both robots and ‘virtual humans’ in online simulation settings is to make them, in the dictum of pioneering industrial designer Raymond Loewy, MAYA–‘most advanced yet acceptable’. The MAYA of robotics appearance was stated about 40 years ago by Professor Masahiro Mori at the Tokyo Institute of Technology; the more human and less machine-like the appearance, the more positive a real human’s emotional response will be. But as simulated humans have progressed in commercial animation and in online settings to ‘almost human’, there is a ‘creepiness factor’ that emerges (more…)