
-
Valerie Health raised $30 million from Redpoint Ventures to automate healthcare front office tasks.
-
The startup uses AI to automate referrals and scheduling for independent provider groups.
-
We got an exclusive look at the 13-slide pitch deck Valerie Health used to raise its Series A.
When Valerie Health CEO Peter Shalek demos his product to clinicians, he has an unusual pitch: "This is a weird demo, because you'll never have to use this software."
Valerie Health, which Shalek cofounded alongside Uber Health founder Nitin Joshi, aims to fully automate time-consuming front-office tasks in healthcare, such as referrals and patient scheduling.
It's taking over those tasks for independent provider groups, a focus that's helping the startup rack up new revenue — and new venture funding.
Valerie Health just raised $30 million in Series A funding led by Redpoint Ventures, the company said Tuesday. The raise brings Valerie Health's total funding to $39 million since its 2024 founding.
Shalek said Valerie Health is already working with several of the nation's largest independent provider groups, in areas ranging from urology and podiatry to cardiology.
Across specialties, the front-office challenges for provider groups are often the same, Shalek said: juggling patient intakes and follow-ups against a backlog of referrals.
Those administrative burdens and related financial pressures can lead provider groups to be acquired by hospitals or consolidated by private equity firms. But those deals can mean higher costs for patients and lower satisfaction for the clinicians impacted. Shalek wants Valerie Health to help providers thrive independently.
"I think that there's an opportunity to make it so that independent practice is the easiest, the highest quality, the most profitable place to deliver care, which is really the core mission we have," he said.
Valerie Health takes over tasks for healthcare front offices with its own employees in the loop to review the software's autonomous actions.
Shalek said Valerie Health helps practices grow, too, by processing new and existing patients faster to increase the volume of patients coming in by 5% to 7% on average.
The startup has plenty of competition. More companies are setting out to automate administrative tasks for hospitals and healthcare practices, such as the Andreessen Horowitz-backed startup Tennr, which raised $101 million in Series C funding in June at a $605 million valuation to focus on automating patient referrals.
Shalek said Valerie Health is bringing in business through its singular focus on independent provider groups and its ability to automate tasks without healthcare practices lifting a finger.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Hezbollah sees potential win as Israel backs down from disarmament goal - 2
Pick Your Favored kind of books - 3
South Korea president says Iran war shows the need to ditch ‘extremely risky’ fossil fuels - 4
Mexico says a third of 130,000 missing people might be alive, fueling criticisms by families - 5
West Palm Beach Shorecrest, renderings of downtown waterfront condo
Toyota’s Next Big Sports Car Might Apparently Be a Turbocharged All-Paw Beast
See the first close-up photos of the moon from NASA's Artemis II mission
See tonight’s solar storm unfold across the world
Israel's haredi draft crisis: Court ruling and political stalemate reach breaking point
One-third of asylum applications by Iranians approved in Germany
Portable Installment Answers for Independent ventures
Dominating the Art of Composing: Creator Bits of knowledge
Director Emerald Fennell explains why "Wuthering Heights" has quotation marks around the title
Key Caper d: A Survey of \Procedure and Tomfoolery Released\ Tabletop game












