Tagged Content
Everything on the platform tagged with telemedicine.
Mohammed Memon is the CEO and co-founder of Hifinite Inc. (dba Chronica), a San Diego telehealth company that builds an AI-enabled digital health platform for remote patient monitoring, chronic care, and virtual visits. An engineer turned product entrepreneur, he holds graduate degrees from Clemson and Harvard and spent two decades shipping software before founding Hifinite in 2016. Under his direction the company built the hiCare suite and the Chronica brand, reached roughly $1.7M in annual revenue with a lean 23-person team, and showed up at the industry's biggest telemedicine stages.
Nick Gulino is the founder and CEO of Recover (letsrecover.com), a Y Combinator-backed telehealth company that delivers evidence-based addiction treatment in partnership with state and local governments, at roughly a tenth of the cost of traditional rehab. A graduate of Yale Law School and UC Berkeley who started at a community college and a 'last chance' high school, he spent a decade in government and addiction services - leading work in McKinsey's government practice, advising governors, and serving in the White House - before building Recover to make recovery accessible to low-income and underserved people.
Soheil Saadat is the founder and CEO of GenieMD, a global virtual care platform that bundles telehealth, remote patient monitoring, remote therapeutic monitoring and chronic care management into one modular, AI-assisted system. A Stanford-trained electrical engineer with a Ph.D., he is a four-time founder whose previous companies were acquired by Hewlett-Packard, Agilent Technologies and Microsoft before he turned his attention from enterprise software to healthcare. His pitch is blunt: most virtual care wastes everyone's time, and a smarter system can let a doctor resolve a visit in under two minutes. GenieMD won Frost & Sullivan's 2024 Company of the Year award for virtual chronic disease management.
AccessHope is a Duarte, California-based health benefits company, founded as a wholly owned subsidiary of City of Hope, that remotely delivers leading cancer expertise from National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers to employers and their covered employees. Rather than asking patients to switch doctors or travel, AccessHope connects local treating oncologists with subspecialists from elite centers, providing peer-to-peer case reviews and evidence-based treatment recommendations so patients can get the best cancer knowledge anywhere - without leaving home.
AmplifyMD is a Los Gatos, California-based health technology company that runs an EHR-integrated, AI-enabled multispecialty virtual care platform. Founded in 2019 by Meena Mallipeddi and Anand Nathan, it connects hospitals and health systems - especially rural and community facilities - to a national network of board-certified specialists across more than 15 fields, helping providers launch and scale telehealth programs for needs like stroke, psychiatry, hospitalist coverage, and infectious disease. The company supports 400+ active programs across all 50 states and powers more than 220,000 consults a year.
Garner Health is a New York-based healthcare technology company that analyzes billions of medical claims to identify the highest-performing doctors, then pairs that data with employer-funded financial incentives so employees can see top providers at a fraction of the out-of-pocket cost. Founded in 2019 by Nick Reber, the company combines a member-facing care navigation app and concierge with a provider analytics engine (Garner DataPro / Garner Research Agent) used by employers and health plans to cut healthcare spend while improving outcomes.
Parsley Health is a functional-medicine telehealth provider founded in 2016 by physician Dr. Robin Berzin. It pairs in-depth diagnostics and biomarker testing with longitudinal, team-based care - doctors plus health coaches - to find and treat the root causes of chronic conditions like gut, autoimmune, hormonal, metabolic and mental-health issues, rather than just managing symptoms. Originally a cash-pay membership model with clinics in New York and Los Angeles, Parsley has shifted to a virtual-first national service and in 2026 became the first functional-medicine provider to accept insurance in-network nationwide, putting its care within reach of roughly 150 million insured Americans.
Spring Health is a New York-based digital mental health company that uses machine learning to match people with the right care - therapy, coaching, medication, or self-guided tools - and deliver it through employers and health plans. Founded in 2016 by Yale graduates, its 'Precision Mental Healthcare' approach reframes the old employee assistance program (EAP) into a measurable, outcomes-driven benefit. Now valued at $3.3 billion, Spring Health reaches more than 20 million people worldwide through employers, payers, and channel partners.
Summer Health is a New York-based pediatric care company that gives parents access to board-certified pediatricians by text message, with answers in about 15 minutes, day or night. Founded in 2022 by Ellen DaSilva and Matthew Woo, it pairs a 24/7 text line with specialists in sleep, nutrition and lactation, and has expanded into longitudinal pediatric primary care - including a comprehensive children's blood panel reviewed by a pediatrician. The company aims to be the calm, always-on front door for family health.
Meena Mallipeddi is the co-founder and CEO of AmplifyMD, an EHR-integrated, multi-specialty virtual care platform and national physician network that helps hospitals close specialist coverage gaps. Raised in a family of doctors and trained as a Stanford honors grad, Cambridge Gates Scholar, and a 15-year technology and healthcare equity investor, she left the markets to build the company alongside her husband and co-founder, Anand Nathan. Since founding in 2019, AmplifyMD has grown to 300+ programs across 150+ clinical sites, a network of nearly 300 physicians, and 15+ specialties, raising $43M total including a $20M Series B in 2025 led by Forerunner Ventures.
Vave Health is a San Jose-based medical device company making point-of-care ultrasound portable, wireless, and affordable. Founded in 2015 by Stanford PhD Amin Nikoozadeh, its handheld probes pair with any iPhone or Android device and carry no subscription fees, aiming to put diagnostic imaging in the hands of clinicians, students, and underserved communities worldwide.
HealthJoy is a Chicago-based digital health company that turns the tangle of employer-sponsored benefits into a single app. Its AI concierge, JOY, plus a team of human healthcare advocates, guides employees to the right care - from telemedicine and virtual primary care to MSK therapy, behavioral health, prescription savings and medical bill review - while helping employers cut healthcare spend. Founded in 2014, HealthJoy serves more than 1,800 employers and over 1.25 million members.
MD Ally is a New York-based health-tech company that plugs telehealth directly into the 911 system. Founded in 2018 by Shanel Fields, the daughter of a volunteer EMT, the platform adds a 'virtual response tier' so dispatchers can route non-emergency callers to the right care instead of automatically sending an ambulance and an ER trip. By partnering with public-safety agencies and insurance payors, MD Ally cuts unnecessary emergency costs while connecting patients to telehealth, mental health and social services.
Robin Berzin is the founder and CEO of Parsley Health, a holistic, root-cause medical practice she launched in 2016 to make functional medicine modern, data-driven, and reachable online nationwide. A Columbia-trained physician who started out chasing securities fraud as a paralegal at the U.S. Attorney's office, she co-founded the doctor-messaging app Cureatr in medical school before building Parsley into one of the largest functional medicine practices in the country. She is the author of State Change, a World Economic Forum Tech Pioneer, and one of Inc.'s 100 most innovative women in business.
Alloy Health is a direct-to-consumer women's telehealth company built to fix how medicine treats menopause. Founded by Anne Fulenwider and Monica Molenaar, Alloy connects women in perimenopause and menopause with menopause-trained doctors and a full menu of FDA-approved, science-backed treatments - hormone replacement therapy, vaginal estrogen, plus hair, skin, sexual-wellness, gut and weight solutions - delivered to the door via an asynchronous platform with a flat $50 annual membership. The company raised a $16M Series A in November 2024 and reached profitability while serving women historically dismissed by the healthcare system.
Evvy is a precision women's health company building the first AI-powered vaginal healthcare platform around a CLIA-certified, at-home metagenomic vaginal microbiome test. Founded in 2021 by Stanford alums Priyanka Jain and Laine Bruzek, Evvy pairs state-of-the-art testing that screens for 700+ bacteria and fungi with clinician-reviewed results, personalized prescription treatment, and one-on-one health coaching. By generating one of the largest datasets on female biomarkers, Evvy aims to close the gender health gap - starting with conditions like bacterial vaginosis that have been chronically under-researched.
Hone Health is a New York-based telemedicine clinic built for preventive and longevity care. It pairs at-home and in-person testing of 40+ biomarkers with physician-guided treatment plans for hormone optimization, menopause, weight loss, sexual health, thyroid and more, delivered nationwide on a subscription model starting around $129/month. After raising a $33M Series A in January 2025 and acquiring in-home care company ivee, Hone has tested 300,000+ patients and treats roughly 55,000 active members.
Neura Health is a virtual neurology clinic that gives the 145 million Americans living with neurological conditions fast access to board-certified neurologists, dedicated care coaches, and an app-based treatment plan. Founded in 2020 by Elizabeth Burstein and Sameer Madan, the company pairs telehealth video visits with always-on care navigation to cut the typical months-long wait for a neurologist down to about a week, treating headache and migraine, epilepsy, sleep disorders, concussion, stroke recovery, tremor, long COVID, and memory disorders.
Anne Fulenwider spent 25 years turning sentences into magazine covers, capped by eight years as editor-in-chief of Marie Claire. Then she walked away from the masthead to co-found Alloy Women's Health, a digital company that connects women in perimenopause and menopause to menopause-trained physicians and doctor-prescribed treatment delivered to the door. She runs it as co-CEO alongside Monica Molenaar, applying an editor's instinct for storytelling to one of medicine's most overlooked subjects.
Zack Gray is the co-founder and CEO of Ophelia, a New York-based telemedicine company he started in 2019 with Columbia Business School lecturer Mattan Griffel. A Columbia astrophysics-and-philosophy graduate turned Wharton MBA, Gray scaled a solar startup to $30M as employee number two before building Ophelia into a Y Combinator-backed, Tiger Global-funded company that has raised roughly $68M across Series A and B rounds.
Carbon Health is an American chain of tech-enabled primary and urgent care clinics that pairs brick-and-mortar visits with telemedicine, all running on its own AI-powered electronic health record. Founded in 2015 in San Francisco by Udemy co-founder Eren Bali, it set out to make seeing a doctor feel as simple as using a consumer app - same-day appointments, transparent records, and a single platform tying diagnostics, virtual visits, and prescriptions together. After raising more than $600 million and scaling past 100 clinics, the company filed for Chapter 11 in February 2026 to restructure its debt while continuing to operate.
Bobn L is the Chief Executive Officer of GoodRx, the Santa Monica-based digital health company that has become America's most-used prescription savings platform. GoodRx tracks drug prices across 75,000+ pharmacies nationwide, delivering coupons and transparency to millions of Americans navigating the opaque world of prescription pricing. Under executive leadership, GoodRx has grown to nearly $800 million in annual revenue, gone public on Nasdaq (GDRX), and expanded into telemedicine - all in service of a single idea: that patients deserve to know what their medications actually cost.
Eran Steinberg is a serial entrepreneur, prolific inventor, and IP strategist who co-founded FotoNation in 1997 - selling it, buying it back, and doing it again a third time. Best known for pioneering the automatic red-eye removal technology now standard in virtually every digital camera and smartphone on earth, he holds 300+ patents across imaging, medical devices, and drug development. A licensed USPTO patent agent with four graduate and undergraduate degrees - including both a B.F.A. in Fine Art Photography and an M.S. in Imaging Science - he bridges the worlds of deep technology and creative vision. Currently CEO and Chairman of Vaica Medical and Chairman of FotoNation following a third management buyout, he also lectures at Johns Hopkins University.

Michael Harrington is the Chief Executive Officer, Practice Management at Vituity, the physician-owned, multispecialty partnership headquartered in Emeryville, California. An accountant by training, he has spent more than three decades inside healthcare operations and stepped into the CEO role in 2002 after years as Vituity's CFO.

Kerem Ozkay is the CEO of Carbon Health, the modern primary and urgent care chain. An aerospace engineer turned marketer turned operator, he ran growth and operations at Carbon for years before founder Eren Bali handed him the top job in August 2024. He now steers the company through a Chapter 11 restructuring designed to refocus on its hybrid care model and homegrown EHR.
Eden is a Latin American health-tech company building the leading cloud PACS/RIS platform for radiology - storage, viewing, AI-assisted reading, and digital delivery of medical imaging used by hospitals and clinics across 17 countries. Founded by Julián Ríos Cantú, who first became known as the teenager behind the EVA breast-cancer-detecting bra, Eden processes millions of medical images a day and has raised roughly $44M total, including a $10M round led by Sierra Ventures and a Series A in October 2025.
Float Health runs an on-demand marketplace that dispatches vetted registered nurses to patients' homes for specialty medication infusions. The San Francisco startup pairs an AI-powered scheduling platform with a gig-style nurse network, and acts as the staffing backbone for specialty pharmacies like CVS, Optum, Walgreens, Kroger and Option Care Health.
HealthTap is a Sunnyvale-based digital health company that connects patients with board-certified physicians 24/7 through video, phone, and text consultations. Founded in 2010, it operates a platform of 105,000 doctors across 141 specialties serving 23 million monthly members. The company pairs AI-powered symptom checking with live clinical consultations, offering affordable virtual primary and urgent care via subscription or per-visit pricing. Recent partnerships with Samsung Health, Eli Lilly's LillyDirect, and Commure signal a shift toward deep integration with major consumer and clinical platforms.
Medable is a Palo Alto-based digital health company building a cloud SaaS platform for decentralized and hybrid clinical trials. Its tools - eCOA+, Total Consent, Sensors, and Televisit - let pharma sponsors and CROs run studies remotely, enrolling patients in over 60 countries and 120+ languages.
Julián Ríos Cantú is the co-founder and CEO of Eden, the leading cloud-native radiology operating system in Latin America. Motivated by his mother's battle with breast cancer, he began building health technology at age 16, went on to become the youngest-ever winner of the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards at 18, earned a Thiel Fellowship, and went through Y Combinator in 2018. Today, Eden processes over 13 million diagnostic studies annually across 18 countries for more than 2,200 medical institutions, backed by Sierra Ventures, Khosla Ventures, Kaszek, and notable angel investors including Leonardo DiCaprio, Ashton Kutcher, and Tony Robbins.