Xealth launches digital prescribing platform, rakes in $8.5 million in funding

Incubated at Providence Health and UPMC, both Epic shops, Xealth enables doctors to prescribe more than pills.
By Bernie Monegain
11:48 AM

Xealth, which offers a cloud-based technology that enables physicians and clinicians to prescribe customized digital healthcare content, such as exercise programs, educational videos, apps and services, has received $8.5 million in new funding.

The startup will use the money to further grow its technology platform.

Xealth, which is already in use at Seattle-based Providence Health and at UPMC in Pittsburgh, has financial backing from DFJ Venture Capital and UPMC as well as from Minnesota’s Hennepin Healthcare System and Froedtert Health in Wisconsin. All four health systems are Epic shops.

The startup can quickly add new digital offerings from vendors, integrate the patient experience into a health system portal, such as Epic’s My Chart, and gauge efficacy and engagement across patient populations.

[Also: UPMC launches app-based ER telemedicine program]

“Xealth can accelerate the development and adoption of healthcare solutions throughout our more than 25 hospitals and 500-plus outpatient sites in a scalable, consistent manner, while helping our physicians engage patients more effectively,” said Tal Heppenstall, president of UPMC Enterprises, the innovation and commercialization arm of UPMC.

Xealth launched in 2016, led by CEO Mike McSherry and COO Aaron Sheedy, both former Swype executives. Swype, which offered an alternative to typing phone messages, was sold to Nuance in 2011.

McSherry and Sheedy and a team of several former Swype employees regrouped to tackle healthcare problems that Providence, UPMC – and other health systems encounter today.

They joined Providence last year as executives-in-residence to find new innovations in healthcare. McSherry and team founded Xealth as a result. The startup was incubated within Providence’s Digital Innovation program.

“Xealth will dramatically improve the connection between patients and clinicians,” Rod Hochman, MD, president and CEO, Providence St. Joseph Health, said in a statement. “Xealth extends the patient and physician relationship outside the walls of a traditional care setting by making it easy for clinicians to prescribe digital content, services, and apps for their patients.”

Twitter: @Bernie_HITN
Email the writer: bernie.monegain@himssmedia.com


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