Healthcare in the US is changing. A confluence of factors have made today the perfect time for health & wellness to be revolutionized by technology: growing healthcare costs, consumer dissatisfaction, provider shortages, and, thanks to the pandemic, the acceleration of telehealth, and easing regulations. While not much of this is new, consumers now have higher expectations for healthcare services following digitization across nearly every other industry; a trend that’s been furthered by employers who have increasingly pushed the cost burden onto consumers.
In recent years the majority of private capital has focused on generalist platforms; however, there remains a number of specialties that require more targeted solutions and justify increased focus by investors and entrepreneurs alike.
Maternity Care
In the US today, over $100Bn is spent annually on prenatal care, labor/delivery, and postpartum. Yet today, the US has the #1 worst rate of maternal mortality in the developed world. Alarmingly, estimates suggest that ~60% of those deaths are preventable. And over a third of women have at least one avoidable ED visit during their pregnancy - significantly adding to these costs! NICU utilization and avoidable ER visits are remain the #1 driver of maternity costs today.
Historically, startups in this market have largely failed to develop a business model aligned with payers that scales in a capital efficient way. Many of these companies over rotated to sell employers a “fringe benefit” without a hard ROI or real engagement. Others pursued an all-digital approach (apps with content, education) or all services (private equity style OB-GYN provider roll-ups), both resulting in mixed success.