Mercom Capital Group, LLC, a global communications and consulting firm, has said that Venture capital (VC) funding in the Healthcare IT (HIT) sector has continued to gain momentum in another record quarter with $493 million raised. There were 104 funding deals in this quarter compared to 51 in the previous quarter. There were also 42 early stage deals this quarter compared to 14 in Q4 2012. Mercom has released its report on funding and mergers and acquisitions (M&A) activity for the Healthcare IT (HIT) sector during the first quarter of 2013.
Indian Healthcare IT companies raised $10.5 million in VC funding this quarter. Strand Life Sciences, a Bangalore-based company providing products and solutions that span the data integration and analysis, knowledge management, experimental, clinical, and pipeline decisions continuum in diverse scientific areas including life and health sciences, raised $10 million in a Series B round of financing from Burrill & Company. Doctree Health Infoservices, a provider of e-commerce portal to connect doctor and patient, raised $500,000 and iKure Techsoft, a developer of technology solutions for the delivery of healthcare services in rural areas, received an undisclosed amount in angel funding through the Intellecap Impact Investment Network (I-cube-N).
Raj Prabhu, CEO of Mercom Capital Group said, “The trend we began to see last year of VCs investing in consumer-focused companies like mobile health, telehealth, personal health, social health, and scheduling, rating and shopping has become much more pronounced. The enormous market opportunity in consumer-focused health has appeared to pique the interest of investors and is likely to continue to grow as witnessed by the surge in VC activity.”
The Top 5 VC funding deals in Q1 2013 was led by the $41 million raise by Health Catalyst, a provider of healthcare data warehousing. That was followed by $40 million raised by xG Health Solutions, a spinoff of Geisinger Health System that offers population health data analytics and patient and population-focused care management. NantHealth, a company focused on delivering next-generation care through the use of advanced secure fiber networks, cloud computing and wireless mobile technology, raised $31 million. Rounding out the Top 5, was Fitbit, a fitness and health tracker company, and One Medical Group, a provider of online primary care services, which both raised $30 million.
108 investors participated in deals in the first quarter of 2013 with ten investors involved in multiple funding rounds. Investors with multiple rounds included: Blueprint Health, Google Ventures, Maverick Capital, Merck Global Health Innovation (GHI) Fund, Nike+ Accelerator, Norwest Venture Partners, Oak Investment Partners, Psilos Group, The Social+Capital Partnership and Y Combinator.
There were 46 M&A transactions this quarter. Health Information Management (HIM) companies attracted the most acquirers with 22 transactions, followed closely by service providers with 11 acquisitions. The largest disclosed transaction was Athenahealth’s acquisition of Epocrates, a mobile health company developing point-of-care medical applications, for $293 million, followed by Allscripts’ acquisition of dbMotion, an Israeli developer of a service oriented architecture-based interoperability platform that enables healthcare organisations and health information exchanges (HIE) to integrate and leverage their information assets, for $235 million, followed by JLL Partners’ acquisition of BioClinica, a provider of clinical trial management solutions, for $123 million.