Rock Health
The report suggests technology could help address variability in care and boost addiction treatment enrollment.
Rock Health's latest report highlights that higher value deals, not increased frequency, are driving the record funding.
Eighty-seven percent of Americans used at least one digital health tool in 2017, up from 80 percent in 2015, according to a new survey out from Rock Health.
Things are tough for women working in healthcare, according to a new report by RockHealth.
The first half of 2018 has been another standout six months for digital health investments, which comprised a total of $3.
Rock Health and StartUp Health, two groups that track investment in digital health, have come out with their respective quarterly reports on funding in the space, and both agree on a couple of interesting insights: that Q1 2018 is the largest Q1 yet, that larger late-stage deals contributed disproportionately to that total, and that investment is increasingly coming from non-traditional investors, especially providers.
In many ways, 2017 was a banner year for digital health funding, according to Rock Health's annual report, which puts funding for the year at a record $5.
According to Rock Health's new end-of-the-year funding report, total digital health funding was down to $4.
Gender diversity in leadership roles can improve the performance of a company, but that diversity is still hard to find in digital health, according to a report from seed fund Rock Health.
Venture funding in 2015 has reached $4.