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265+ telehealth companies to know | 2025 | Health IT

By October 8, 2025No Comments

Demand for flexible, accessible care has skyrocketed since the Covid-19 pandemic, sparking an unprecedented increase in telehealth adoption. In response, hospitals, health systems and healthcare companies have dramatically expanded their telehealth offerings, introducing innovative solutions that bring high-quality care directly to patients.

Below are 265+ telehealth companies to know. We accepted nominations for this list. Contact Anna Falvey at afalvey@beckershealthcare.com with questions, comments, or to recommend a company for this list.

Note: Telehealth companies do not and cannot pay for inclusion on this list. This list is not exhaustive, nor is it a ranking or rating. Companies are listed in alphabetical order.

1-800MD (Charlotte, N.C.). 1.800MD offers businesses and individuals around-the-clock access to telehealth solutions throughout the U.S. The company oversees one of the largest telemedicine physician networks in the nation, offering licensed professionals who can diagnose, recommend treatment and prescribe medications over telephone or by video and email. 

3Derm (Boston). 3Derm is an imaging system that takes pictures of a person’s skin and delivers three views to a dermatologist for virtual visits.

19 Labs (Redwood City, Calif.). 19 Labs offer enhanced telehealth technologies for employers and rural communities. The company provides point of care solutions that include advanced remote diagnostic devices plus artificial intelligence, communication using Zoom or AmWell video calls, and patient education.

20/20NOW (Holbrook, N.Y.). 20/20NOW is the inventor and leader of Ocular Telehealth. The company provides comprehensive eye exam and eye health screenings via telehealth. It partnered with General Vision Services in 2018 to create a mobile eye center featuring ocular telehealth.

98point6 (Seattle). 98point6 develops and licenses advanced software for virtual care, emphasizing AI-driven clinical support and EHR integration. Their scalable platform supports both live and asynchronous patient visits, enhancing efficiency and clinical outcomes across more than 4,000 conditions. 98point6 partners with health systems to expand access, improve patient engagement and optimize provider efficiency. The company also introduced an asynchronous care module and acquired assets from Bright.md, further solidifying their position in the virtual care market by offering flexible, future-proof solutions.

A&D Medical (San Jose, Calif.). A&D Medical offers connected telehealth solutions that enhance remote patient care, including Bluetooth and cellular blood pressure monitors. The company also collaborates with other leading telehealth companies to create simple-to-use, reliable and accurate products. 

ADHD Online (Grand Rapids, Mich.). ADHD Online was founded in 2018, with the mission of providing access to quality ADHD assessments to all. The team is staffed with industry experts across the U.S. The company recently launched a teletherapy program to bring patients more personalized options. 

AMC Health (New York City). AMC Health provides clinically proven telehealth and real-time virtual care solutions. Its FDA Class II cleared platform, end-to-end services and clinically proven solutions enable healthcare organizations to securely extend ‎their services beyond the hospital and ambulatory clinic settings.

AMD Global Telemedicine (Chelmsford, Mass.). AMD Global Telemedicine developed the Telemedicine Encounter Management Solution, a platform used in 98 countries to enable patients to connect with clinicians remotely. In April 2018, the company developed a direct-to-consumer telehealth platform.

Access TeleCare (Dallas). Access TeleCare delivers acute specialty telemedicine across one in five U.S. hospitals, spanning behavioral health, neurology, hospital medicine, pulmonary and critical care, maternal-fetal medicine, infectious disease, cardiology and nephrology. Across 20-plus years, the company has supported more than 7 million patient encounters and reaches a virtual catchment covering over 65% of the U.S. population, including many underserved communities. The company is the first and longest-standing telemedicine organization to earn The Joint Commission’s “Gold Seal of Approval”, maintains HITRUST certification for its Telemed IQ platform and cart, and in 2024 helped found the American Telemedicine Association’s center of digital excellence. Over the past year, the company has completed more than 300 program implementations, hired over 215 clinicians to meet demand, and served populations in which 84% of patients are from demographically recognized vulnerable groups.

Accolade (Seattle). Accolade is a personalized healthcare company that provides virtual primary care, mental health services and care navigation through employers, health plans and government solutions. Their platform uses predictive engagement and proactive care to improve health outcomes and reduce costs. Accolade’s digital health platform offers personalized healthcare management, integrating services and programs for higher engagement and better outcomes. Serving over 14 million lives across 1,200 healthcare customers, Accolade partners with companies like Kindbody and Brightline, and has launched initiatives like Virtual Blue with Blue Shield of California to increase access to care and reduce costs. Accolade won the 2024 Artificial Intelligence Excellence Award from the Business Intelligence Group. 

Advantia Health (Arlington, Va.). Advantia Health providers often offer telehealth appointments for mental health, gynecological issues, lab and test results, prescription refills and more. The company also acquired telehealth platform Pacify in 2019, aiming to broaden their virtual capacity.

AEMtec GmbH (Berlin, Germany). AEMtec GmbH is a business-to-business enterprise focused on technologies for sophisticated electronic applications and contributing expertise to implant, imaging system and mobile diagnostics applications.

All Care Therapies (Long Beach, Calif.). All Care Therapies is transforming pediatric therapy services with a virtual care platform that combines advanced technology with personalized therapy. The company’s platform offers easy access to experienced therapists from home, eliminating the need for clinic visits and addressing challenges like busy schedules and geographical constraints. They provide a comprehensive range of virtual services, secure video conferencing and educational resources for parents.

AmplifyMD (Los Gatos, Calif.). AmplifyMD’s AI-enhanced platform integrates directly with EHRs and picture archiving and communication systems to orchestrate specialty consults across emergent, acute and outpatient settings with intelligent routing, single-login documentation and real-time data at the point of care. Hospitals configure workflows for programs such as TeleStroke and emergent cardiac alerts, while analytics provide system-level visibility into volumes, response times, outcomes and return on investment. The company supplements hospital coverage with a network of board-certified specialists across 15-plus disciplines, reducing transfers and locum costs while improving time to care. Programs and consults grew 400% over two years, with deployments spanning one national physician practice covering 13 health systems via single sign-on, TeleStroke for a leading nonprofit system, and EHR-integrated services for Ontario, Calif.-based Prime Healthcare across six states, seven specialties and more than 25 programs. Accolades include a 2025 MedTech Breakthrough “Best Overall Telemedicine Platform” and multiple industry innovation awards.

Amwell (Boston). Amwell is building a hybrid care ecosystem that integrates in-person, virtual and automated care, supported by a comprehensive digital platform. The company collaborates with providers, payers and innovators to enhance patient care, improve outcomes and reduce costs. Amwell’s platform includes digital mental health programs like SilverCloud and partnerships with organizations such as Cleveland Clinic and New Hyde Park, N.Y.-based Northwell Health. With over 24 million virtual care visits, Amwell’s technology-driven approach aims to transform healthcare delivery and improve access to quality care. Recently, Amwell was selected by the U.S. Defense Health Agency and partnered with Amplar Health to expand hybrid care services.

Arizona Telemedicine Program (Tucson). Part of the University of Arizona College of Medicine in Tucson, Arizona Telemedicine Program provides telemedicine services in communities throughout the state and distance learning opportunities.

Array Behavioral Care (Chicago). Array Behavioral Care is a clinician-led, tech-enabled national practice delivering evidence-based psychiatry and therapy across emergency departments, inpatient units, crisis settings, clinics and homes, partnering with payers such as Humana and Aetna CVS Health. The organization hires clinicians and deploys proprietary measurement-based pathways, enabling coordinated, culturally competent care rather than gig-based encounters. The practice is the first national virtual behavioral health practice to operate on Epic, providing direct access to integrated medical and behavioral data for safer prescribing, triage and outcomes reporting. In April 2025, Array launched “CareConnect” to unify “OnDemand Care”, “Community Care” and “AtHome” into a single framework, and partnered with TeamHealth to streamline emergency department behavioral healthcare. Array serves millions across all 50 states, supported by leadership in operations and IT and accreditations including the Joint Commission Gold Seal and HITRUST e1.

Artisight (Chicago). Artisight’s clinician-designed “Smart Hospital Platform” embeds virtual nursing, physician teleconsults, interpreter services, remote video monitoring and virtual case management across health systems via a multimodal network of two-way audiovisual, computer vision, voice recognition, vital sign monitoring and real-time location services. The platform scales programs like virtual admissions, discharges, rounding and 24/7 patient safety monitoring while integrating with local EHRs for ambient documentation and accurate alerts. Health systems report a 69% reduction in patient falls, a 45% drop in nurse turnover and 94% nurse satisfaction, alongside measurable gains in patient experience. Deployments span rural critical access hospitals to multi-hospital systems, including expansions covering over 1,000 inpatient beds. In the surgical domain, Artisight is collaborating with other leaders in the space to bring AI-driven automation and real-time insights to the operating room, improving perioperative efficiency.

As You Are (San Antonio, Texas). As You Are, launched in August 2022, revolutionizes pediatric autism evaluations through a fully virtual approach, significantly reducing the national average wait time. The company connects families to local support services and provides ongoing guidance from dedicated “care sidekicks”. Featured on broadcast news outlets nationwide and recognized for its innovative impact, As You Are aims to challenge traditional healthcare norms and improve access to early autism diagnostic services.

Assured Independence (Everett, Wash.). Assured Independence provides turnkey technologies in remote patient monitoring for managing chronic disease, medication management, as well as buttons for stability and wandering. The wireless devices are monitored remotely by a 24/7 contact center. 

AvaSure (Belmont, Mich.). AvaSure is a virtual care platform used by hospitals, health systems and academic medical centers. Their AI-powered solutions, such as “TeleSitter” and virtual nursing, optimize patient monitoring and staff efficiency, achieving significant outcomes like high return on investment and reduction in adverse patient events. AvaSure’s innovations include the launch of Episodic Virtual Care and an analytics portal, enhancing scalability, workflow integration and benchmarking capabilities.

Avel eCare (Sioux Falls, S.D.). Avel eCare operates the world’s largest and most comprehensive virtual health network, partnering with diverse entities across the U.S. to provide high-quality virtual care through a wide range of services. Avel has developed a telemedicine platform with advanced technology and a network of providers in various specialties, significantly lowering healthcare costs and improving care quality. In 2023, Avel expanded its emergency medical and crisis care services, providing critical support to emergency medical services and law enforcement, and improving telemedicine for hospitals through acquisitions. Avel’s mission is to deliver accessible, high-quality care, continually innovating to serve more patients and communities effectively.

Axs Healthcare (Redlands, Calif.). Axs Healthcare is a digital patient engagement and asynchronous telemedicine platform specializing in orthopedic and multispecialty surgical practices.

Azalea Health (Sandy Springs, Ga.). Azalea Health is a cloud-based EHR and revenue cycle management services solution with telehealth functionality integrated into its medical record system, patient portal, mobile apps and billing software.

Azova (Alpine, Utah). Azova is a software-as-a-service company. It offers services including telehealth clinics, secure messaging, online scheduling, population health, e-commerce and digital concierge services.

BAC Telemed (Wesley Chapel, Fla.). BAC Telemed provides national and international HIPAA-secure telemedicine, back-office support and real-time assistance for physicians.

Beam Healthcare (Madison, Wis.). Beam combines natural mobility and cloud-based video conferencing through its Beam app.

Beaming Health (San Francisco). Created by neurodiverse families for neurodiverse families in 2021, Beaming Health is an online marketplace that helps parents of kids with autism and other developmental differences find therapies, services, and resources.

Best In Class MD (New York City). Best In Class MD is an expert medical opinion company that provides individuals and enterprise clients with easy access to the best physicians. The company is centered around the value of transparency, and allows end users to review biographies and pricing of each provider.

Blue Cirrus Consulting (Greenville, S.C.). The Blue Cirrus telehealth team partners with healthcare organizations across the U.S. to assist with strategy and business planning, staffing, technology acquisition and initiative implementation.

Blue Sky Telehealth (Greenwood Village, Colo.). Blue Sky Telehealth provides emergency and routine consultations to improve access to specialized care. It provides cost-effective services for hospitals seeking immediate access to board-certified physicians.

Bongiovi Medical and Health Technologies (Port Saint Lucie, Fla.). The Bongiovi Medical Digital Power Station can effectively address the audio issues common in telemedicine solutions, resulting in a superior experience with improved voice communication and auscultation.

Braster (Warsaw, Poland). The Braster Device uses a breakthrough method of applying liquid crystals in breast cancer screening to enable women to perform breast self-examinations at home. The device pairs with a mobile app that sends data to the team’s telemedical center for analysis. 

Brightside Health (San Francisco). Brightside Health is a telepsychiatry platform specializing in treating clinical depression, anxiety and other mood disorders, including severe cases and elevated suicide risk. Their AI-powered technology, PrecisionRx, provides personalized treatment plans with high efficacy, achieving optimal outcomes for patients. Partnering with major payers like Centene and Blue Cross Blue Shield, Brightside Health extends its services to over 100 million covered lives, including Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries. Their crisis care program provides timely access to specialized mental health support, significantly reducing symptoms and enhancing care continuity beyond acute interventions.

Brother OmniJoin (Bridgewater, N.J.). Brother’s OmniJoin solution is a secure, cloud-based, HIPAA-compliant video conferencing solution that connects clinicians and healthcare organizations with a broader remote patient base.

CMI Health (Alpharetta, Ga.). CMI Health creates, manufactures and sells home-based patient monitors to record and transfer patients’ vitals to providers remotely.

Canon USA (Melville, N.Y.). Canon USA’s eye screening technology is an intuitive software solution providers use to perform retinal screenings and then quickly transmit the images to physicians in any location for diagnostic purposes.

Captureproof (San Francisco). Captureproof empowers patients and healthcare providers to communicate visual information through photos and videos securely, from anywhere at any time.

Cardinal Health (Dublin, Ohio). As a large provider of telepharmacy services, Cardinal Health Remote Pharmacy Services provides remote medication order processing and review, delivers clinical interventions and medication consultations, and elevates patient safety and enables hospitals to comply with pharmacy board and accreditation standards.

CareClix (Alexandria, Va.). Founded in 2006, CareClix provides software and services for telemedicine applications. The company developed a suite of telemedicine technologies for hospitals and clinicians to interact with patients and caregivers.

Caregility (Wall Township, N.J.). Caregility Cloud powers a purpose-built ecosystem of enterprise telehealth solutions across the care continuum. Caregility provides secure, reliable audio and video communication designed for any device and clinical workflow, in both acute and ambulatory settings. 

CarePICS (Raleigh, N.C.). CarePICS has a remote clinical imagery system providers use to store, post and share information in real time. The technology’s wound measure feature automatically calculates a wound’s surface area, length and width.

CareSkore (Mountain View, Calif.). CareSkore offers remote personalized population management solutions for risk stratification, patient engagement and chronic care management.

Ceiba Health (New York City). Ceiba provides virtual specialty care solutions with an AI-enabled, integrated, and automated platform. Ceiba’s innovative algorithmic routing-bot, RoRo, seamlessly connects providers, hospitals, and clinics to enhance virtual clinician-patient interactions and optimize clinical outcomes.

Certified Languages International (Portland, Ore.). Certified Languages International has telephone interpretive services, on-demand video remote interpreting and documentation translation services, providing access to interpreters of more than 230 languages. Their services help healthcare providers offer secure, seamless care. 

Charlie Health (Bozeman, Mont.). Founded in 2020, Charlie Health is a mental healthcare provider for young people in crisis. The company’s clinicians are committed to providing unparalleled access to evidence-based treatment. Through a virtual-first approach, the company delivers intensive mental health treatment designed specifically for a high acuity patient population.

ChARM Health (Pleasanton, Calif.). ChARM Health’s platform includes EHR, practice management, revenue cycle management, telehealth and mobile health applications. The company’s telehealth platform supports virtual patient visits.

Children’s Health Virtual Care (Dallas). Children’s Health operates one of the nation’s largest pediatric systems, and its virtual care program is responsible for revolutionary initiatives in telehealth. The program launched Texas’ first teleNICU in 2013 to triage newborns and reduce unnecessary transfers, alongside a school-based telehealth program that now serves more than 250 schools, has trained 1,000 nurses and holds 94% parent satisfaction. The school initiative improved one district’s absenteeism by 2%, yielding $500,000 in additional county funding and facilitated 1,500 telemedicine visits in 2024. Also in 2024, the nurse advice line managed approximately 140,000 calls with a 91% service level, directing 64% to in-home care and 16% to the emergency department, while virtual visit apps and kiosks supported 5,947 visits. The program uses advanced peripherals to deliver diagnostics beyond video alone and launched an AI symptom checker used 3,573 times with 10,951 topics accessed. Children’s Health Virtual Care now spans over 30 specialties and integrated behavioral health, with e-consults live across primary care clinics to streamline non-urgent specialty questions.

CipherHealth (New York City). Founded in 2009, CipherHealth is a patient engagement platform that includes digital rounding and checklists, care management coordination, patient outreach and more.

CirrusMD (Denver). CirrusMD delivers on-demand virtual care, connecting patients with a licensed physician in less than a minute through a secure chat-based app. CirrusMD’s integrated care is delivered to millions of users across all 50 states, by multi-speciality, board-certified doctors who can treat a broad range of conditions, from acute to chronic, and from primary care to specialty areas, including behavioral health.

The Clinic by Cleveland Clinic. The Clinic, a joint venture between Cleveland Clinic and Amwell, offers high-quality virtual second opinions by combining Cleveland Clinic’s clinical expertise with Amwell’s digital platform. This initiative provides patients across the U.S. access to over 3,500 expert physicians from the comfort of their homes, resulting in diagnosis or treatment plan changes 67% of the time and high average savings for patients. The Clinic’s services include secure video consultations, digital record collection and concierge-level care. It aims to improve patient outcomes, reduce misdiagnosis, and lower unnecessary care costs, expanding access to world-class medical expertise globally. In addition to announcing its partnership with Transcarent in 2023, The Clinic continues to expand relationships with health and payer organizations including Elevance, Rightway and others.

Cloud DX (Ontario, Canada). Cloud DX is a developer of remote vital sign monitoring equipment, software and mobile apps. The company also offers a Connected Health platform that blends smart medical devices, secure software and patient support. 

Conduit Health Partners (Cincinnati). Conduit Health Partners is a nurse-led healthcare solutions company specializing in nurse-first triage and patient transfer coordination. The company offers virtual care solutions such as remote patient monitoring and hospital-at-home services. The company aims to ensure that patients are guided to the right level of care, reducing avoidable emergency room visits, helping prevent readmissions and easing provider burden. Conduit Health Partners supports more than 400 facilities across all 50 states, delivering scalable, cost-effective solutions that improve access, patient experience and operational efficiency.

Connected Technology Solutions (Menomonee Falls, Wis.). Connected Technology Solutions develops customizable patient check-in kiosks. The self-service telehealth technology helps improve patient experience and efficiency across hospitals, health systems and clinics. 

Contec Medical Systems (Qinhuangdao, China). Contec Medical Systems, founded in 1996 as a medical instrument manufacturer and distributor, now offers more than 20 product categories, including telemedicine equipment.

Corstrata (Savannah, Ga.). Corstrata provides telehealth technologies and clinical expertise on ostomies and chronic wounds. The platform is designed to provide access to certified wound and ostomy clinicians and improve financial outcomes.

Cromford Health (Charlotte, N.C.). Cromford Health works closely with trusted collaborators to increase telehealth and digital health knowledge through strategic positioning, research, education, training, program growth and scaling, operations and more. The company has published articles, research papers, books and book chapters and has worked in over 18 countries through virtual and in-person capacities. 

Curai Health (San Francisco). Curai Health delivers AI-unlocked primary care by embedding machine learning in clinical workflows so specially trained clinicians can provide convenient, longitudinal care at a fraction of traditional costs. The company has partnered with Burlington, Mass.-based Tufts Medicine, with the system using Curai to reach patients across Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Similarly, Priority Health offers free Curai visits to uninsured Michigan adults, and Rightway integrates 24/7 Curai urgent care into navigation and pharmacy benefit manager support. Curai’s custom provider workspace guides patients to the right point of care, accelerates accurate diagnoses and reduces administrative burden. Recognitions include Rock Health’s “Top 50 in Digital Health” for 2025 and CB Insights’ “AI 100” in 2022.

CureCompanion (Austin, Texas). CureCompanion offers a white-label telemedicine platform for healthcare providers, telemedicine equipment companies and IT companies.

Current Health (Boston). Current Health provides the leading FDA-cleared, artificial intelligence-powered remote patient monitoring platform to help healthcare providers reduce risk, cost, and readmissions while improving patient outcomes and delivering better, more proactive healthcare.

Curve Health (Miami). Curve Health offers skilled nursing facilities innovative telemedicine solutions that transform patient experiences, enhance staff efficiency, and position them at the forefront of the evolving healthcare landscape. The company’s suite of virtual care products and solutions help mitigate hospital readmissions and reduce provider burnout.

Cylinder Health (Chicago). Cylinder Health delivers clinician-backed virtual care for the full spectrum of gastrointestinal conditions, connecting members to the right support via a tech-forward, human-first platform. Users report strong return on investment and engagement, alongside validated outcomes including 92% improved quality of life and 91% symptom improvement. Since 2021, Cylinder has supported more than 100,000 members nationwide and in 2025 expanded capabilities by acquiring Dieta Health, the first clinically validated AI stool-imaging app, validated in four peer-reviewed studies, including work from Los Angeles-based Cedars-Sinai and Rochester, Minn.-based Mayo Clinic. Integrating Dieta’s AI enables earlier diagnosis, flags critical bowel-pattern changes and helps prevent costly hospitalizations. Recognized by Newsweek and Digital Health New York, Cylinder is scaling accessible GI care with outcomes that lower employer and payer costs and reduce absenteeism.

Dartmouth-Hitchcock Connected Care (Lebanon, N.H.). Dartmouth-Hitchcock Connected Care collaborates with physicians and healthcare facilities across northern New England to offer telemedicine services to nearly 2 million residents.

Delfina Care (San Francisco). Delfina Care delivers an AI-powered maternal health platform that integrates predictive analytics, EHR workflows and patient engagement to identify risks early and guide timely interventions across prenatal and postpartum care. Its models were developed with diverse population data and leading obstetricians, and are able to surface risks such as hypertensive disorders and gestational diabetes, reducing preventable complications and high-cost events like neonatal intensive care unit admissions. Clinicians access real-time risk dashboards and streamlined workflows while expectant mothers use a companion app for tracking, education and continuous connection to care teams. The company saw a $17 million Series A in January 2025, along with partnerships with BCBS New Mexico and BCBS Illinois and collaboration with Lone Star Circle of Care. Honors include an industry award for “Best Maternal Health Platform” earned in spring 2025, among others.

Dignity Health Telemedicine Network (Sacramento, Calif.). Dignity Health Telemedicine Network connects patients and attending physicians to specialists through a two-way audio and video feed for diagnostic and treatment discussions.

DocGo (New York City). DocGo delivers in-person–first mobile health that fills telehealth’s gap, deploying approximately 5,000 clinicians and nearly 1,000 vehicles to bring exams, vaccinations, diagnostics and treatments to homes and workplaces. Its hybrid model virtually pairs advanced practice providers with on-site nurses and integrates proprietary tech to close care gaps for payer-assigned cohorts now exceeding 700,000 patients. Since inception, emergency-department avoidance programs have prevented 85,000-plus visits and an estimated $265 million in system savings. In 2024 the platform supported over 1.5 million patient interactions, 58,000 vaccinations and 99,000 depression screenings across 31 U.S. states and the U.K.

Doctegrity (Plano, Texas). Doctegrity provides bilingual primary care telemedicine and mental health therapists, pharmacy discounts and more for any employee. The company applies a subscription-based model that does not require insurance. 

Doctor On Demand (San Francisco). Doctor On Demand, part of Included Health, provides 24/7 virtual urgent, primary, chronic, preventive and mental healthcare through hundreds of board-certified physicians and licensed psychologists. More than 100 million people have access to its services through employer and health plan partnerships. The platform supports whole-person care, offering in-person labs, local referrals and prescription management alongside virtual visits. In May 2025, the company released a national study with Talker Research showing two-thirds of Americans cite record-high financial anxiety, with 76% feeling alone in managing financial stress and one in five reporting worsening mental health in the past year. The findings underscore the urgent need for affordable, integrated mental and physical healthcare solutions at the core of Doctor On Demand’s model.

DocViaWeb (Coral Springs, Fla.). DocViaWeb focuses on developing telemedicine and telemonitoring systems and solutions, allowing patients to receive diagnoses and care in more convenient settings.

Doximity (San Francisco). Doximity is the leading platform for medical professionals providing digital tools to help doctors be more productive so they can provide better care for their patients. Doximity serves over 150 health systems nationwide with its telehealth solution, Doximity Dialer, and enables clinicians to conduct virtual patient visits in real-time, from any device, with no patient downloads or logins required.

Doxy.me (Charleston, S.C.). Doxy.me is a telehealth platform built for healthcare providers, taking clinical workflows online and providing an experience equivalent to visiting a provider’s office. State-of-the-art security and encryption protocols make it safe and secure. 

Eagle Telemedicine (Atlanta). The physician-led telemedicine firm partners with hospitals to help them implement telehealth models of care.

eClinicalWorks (Westborough, Mass.). eClinicalWorks is a cloud-based EHR, population health management, patient engagement and revenue cycle management solutions provider. The company introduced a telehealth solution mobile app in June 2017.

eDevice (Mérignac, France). eDevice’s solutions transmit data securely between patients and medical systems, bringing connectivity solutions to medical device manufacturers.

Eko Health (Emeryville, Calif.). Eko Health offers a platform of noninvasive cardiovascular care devices, including a digital stethoscope and combined electrocardiogram and digital stethoscope device. The company’s telehealth products allow providers to care for patients remotely with the help of AI-powered clinical decision support tools. 

Elation Health (San Francisco). Elation Health supports over 36,000 clinicians caring for 20 million Americans with a clinical-first EHR that embeds secure telehealth, smart scheduling, real-time chart sharing and automated follow-ups to preserve continuity across virtual and in-person care. In 2024, the company launched “Note Assist”, an AI-powered ambient scribe integrated directly into the EHR to reduce after-hours charting and documentation burden while maintaining provider-patient engagement. A partnership with Long Beach, Calif.-based Seoul Medical Group expands Elation’s end-to-end platform across a large independent physician network, supporting scalable, value-based primary care nationwide. Recognized “Best in KLAS” for EHR-centric virtual care platforms in 2023 and 2025, along with “Best Overall EHR Solution Provider” by MedTech Breakthrough in 2024, Elation also earned the 2025 “Best in KLAS” small practice ambulatory EHR/practice management.

Electronic Caregiver (Las Cruces, N.M.). In addition to emergency response, Electronic Caregiver technologies incorporate capabilities of activity detection, medication management, family monitoring connected applications and telemedicine.

Emerest Connect (Brooklyn, N.Y.). Emerest Connect is a first-of-its-kind telehealth program helping home-bound patients engage socially with peers and enhancing the holistic health of patients. The company is particularly committed to prioritizing the mental health of elderly patients, a demographic whose emotional and behavioral health is often overlooked.

e-Psychiatry (Hartford, Conn.). e-Psychiatry offers telepsychiatry and teletherapy tools and programs to healthcare organizations and directly to patients, as well as access to its national panel of mental health providers.

Equum Medical (New York City). Equum Medical is a physician-led partner for high-acuity virtual care, extending hospital capacity with specialized services that enhance access, clinician workflow and program leadership. In 2025, the company expanded virtual nursing enterprisewide at Edison, N.J.-based Hackensack Meridian Health and launched modular virtual multispecialty and virtual hospitalist services within its acute care services suite for hospitals of any size. Partnerships with National Cooperative of Health Networks and extended relationships with National Rural Health Association and American Telemedicine Association connect rural and community hospitals to a digitally enabled clinical workforce. Industry recognition includes Black Book’s 2025 No. 1 platform in teleICU and virtual nursing and Frost & Sullivan’s “Best Practices Awards” in 2024 and 2025.

eVisit (Washington, D.C.). eVisit offers a virtual care platform that helps healthcare organizations improve care outcomes, revenue and more. The telehealth company allows providers to offer virtual urgent, primary, specialty, pre-post op and employee care.

ExamMed (Atlanta). ExamMed equips doctors with virtual healthcare technology to treat patients remotely through an easy-to-use, HIPAA-compliant video-enabled platform. The platform quickly enables reimbursable video visits, has patient scheduling and messaging capabilities (asynchronous encounters), and offers interoperable EHR integration.

Fabric (New York City). Fabric’s end-to-end care enablement system serves more than 75 health systems and payers, 30,000 employers and digital health companies to reach 100 million lives, using proprietary Hybrid AI to expand access, boost engagement and improve outcomes across virtual and in-person care. Its platform automates 99% of administrative tasks, increases provider efficiency for video visits and for asynchronous care, and optimizes emergency department flow by reducing patient elopement 46% and length of stay by 21–29 minutes. AI self-service lowers call volumes 30%, trims wait times 35%, increases use of unfilled visit blocks, and drives high satisfaction and 58% higher response to pre/post-visit outreach. Cumulatively, Hybrid AI has saved 540,000 provider hours and unlocked 2.16 million additional visits. In 2024-25, Fabric closed four acquisitions, raised a $60 million Series A led by General Catalyst, acquired MeMD from Walmart and TeamHealth’s virtual care service line, and launched Hybrid AI.

Figure 1 (Toronto, Canada). Working with millions of healthcare professionals, Figure 1 helps physicians share their cases through mobile devices for other physicians all around the world to view.

Firefly Global (Belmont, Mass.). Firefly Global is a provider of wireless portable microscopes and magnifying cameras with real-time video transmission.

First Stop Health (Chicago). First Stop Health provides 24/7 virtual urgent, primary, preventive, chronic and mental healthcare to employer populations nationwide via app, web and phone. The company surpassed 1 million patient visits in early 2025 and grew members and visits by 30% in 2024, while expanding mental health into a whole-program model offering unlimited no-cost visits and next-day scheduling. Since launch, the whole mental health program has achieved high user satisfaction scores and about 32% utilization, contributing to a 40% average utilization across services and measurable patient gains. Employers realized approximately $70.7 million in savings from mental health services alone in 2024.

Fitango (New York City). Fitango is a health IT solutions developer with platforms designed for payers, long-term care centers, transplant centers and other healthcare facilities to streamline processes and engage patients at home.

Fonemed (Ventura). Fonemed is a population health management and telehealth solutions provider. The company offers healthcare based services and solutions like virtual nurse triage. 

Foodsmart (San Francisco). Foodsmart is the nation’s largest foodcare provider, integrating registered dietitians, medical nutrition therapy, food access support and community engagement to address obesity, food insecurity and chronic disease. The company partners with Medicaid plans, hospital systems, and employers to serve 2.2 million members and over 1,000 employers, expanded its dietitian network by 250% in 2023, and added 10 million eligible lives through seven new health plan partnerships. Outcomes include payer savings, high satisfaction scores and clinically meaningful improvements in weight loss, food security, diabetes control, and hypertension control. To improve affordability and access, Foodsmart’s “FoodsMART” marketplace partners with Walmart, Amazon and Instacart, saving members about $34 per order. The company’s policy leadership includes co-founding the Virtual Foodcare Coalition with American Telemedicine Association Action to advance reimbursement and access for virtual nutrition care. 

ForaCare (Moorpark, Calif.). ForaCare is a software company that creates products for chronic disease management. The ForaCare telehealth technology allows measurements to be taken from home and transmitted to a cloud server.

Freestate Health (Wichita, Kan.). Freestate aims to fill the gaps in healthcare for rural Americans through telemedicine applications. The company provides inpatient and outpatient telehealth services in 20 specialties to more than 34 hospitals in Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico and New York.

General Devices (Ridgefield, N.J.). GD improves healthcare by developing comprehensive mobile telemedicine, communication and notification solutions for pre-hospital and hospital environments.

Genoa Healthcare (Renton, Wash.). Genoa Healthcare provides behavioral health pharmacy and medication management services for patients, integrating telehealth to improve access.

Global Partnership for Telehealth (Blackshear, Ga.). Global Partnership for Telehealth, a nonprofit corporation with a mission to deliver more affordable and sustainable telehealth programming and solutions, manages a network of clinical endpoints.

GlobalMed (Scottsdale, Ariz.). GlobalMed powers a virtual health platform that supports patients throughout the continuum of care. Providers can use the EHR-integrated software with data capturing tools and delivery systems for the virtual health visit.

Glooko (Palo Alto, Calif.). Glooko transforms digital health by connecting people with diabetes and their care providers, enabling telehealth, clinical research and improved collaboration. The company empowers diabetes management by collecting and unlocking the power of data from BG-meters, CGMs, insulin pumps and pens.

Greenway Health (Tampa, Fla.). Greenway provides EHR, practice management, virtual care, and revenue cycle management solutions that help practices in multiple specialties grow profitably, remain compliant, work more efficiently and improve patient outcomes. Greenway provides telehealth solutions that integrate directly with healthcare organizations’ EHRs and offer patients remote care options. 

Handspring Health (New York City). Handspring Health is a virtual pediatric mental health clinic for children, teens and young adults, purpose-built to treat moderate-to-high acuity needs often underserved by traditional telehealth. The company’s higher-touch model delivers personalized, evidence-based therapy with clinicians trained through an in-house program tailored to pediatric populations. Outcomes are strong, with 98% of parents reporting positive day-to-day changes at discharge and 84% of anxiety patients and 79% of depression patients achieving measurable clinical improvement. To expand access and affordability, Handspring Health is in-network with Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare and multiple Blue Cross Blue Shield plans.

Headspace (Santa Monica, Calif.). Headspace is an online mental health resource that incorporates evidence-based meditation and mindfulness tools, mental health coaching, therapy and psychiatry. The company helps make mental health more accessible.

Health Monitor Network (Montvale, N.J.). With over 250,000 offices and over 450,000 healthcare professionals engaging with digital and print educational products, Health Network Monitoring is leading healthcare education by building brands and empowering patients. As the first company to place educational content on digital screens in patient exam rooms, the company creates educational healthcare content that fosters more productive patient-physician dialogue at every point of care.

Health Recovery Solutions (Hoboken, N.J.). Health Recovery Solutions supplies medical centers and home care agencies with a remote monitoring platform focused on changing patient behavior to reduce readmissions and improve clinical outcomes.

HealthePractices (West Nyack, N.Y.). HealthePractices provides business development and consulting services for companies involved in telemedicine and medical imaging, with emphasis on teleradiology, urgent care, elder care and AI.

HealthLinkNow (Gold River, Calif.). HealthLinkNow is an integrated network of psychiatrists and licensed mental health providers who care for patients via telehealth. HLN provides support to individuals and facilities experiencing challenges in accessing care. This flexible solution to healthcare is designed to help individuals in need, assist healthcare systems with meeting the immediate needs of their patients and aid in the long-term goals of health centers, clinics and healthcare providers.

HelixVM (Boca Raton, Fla.). HelixVM is a virtual care and telemedicine company that aims to simplify care for physicians and providers using asynchronous medicine and AI. The company’s primary focus is the provision of fast and efficient outpatient care access.

Hellocare (Clearwater, Fla.). Hellocare is the world’s most integrated AI-driven virtual healthcare delivery platform, offering comprehensive solutions such as virtual nursing, rounding, observation, digital whiteboard-room signs, patient engagement, patient entertainment, remote patient monitoring and hospital-at-home services. Built with cutting-edge technology, Hellocare is a platform designed to seamlessly integrate with existing systems, significantly enhancing efficiency and experiences for both healthcare providers and patients. 

HeraMED (Tustin, Calif.). HeraMED is a pregnancy monitoring technology solutions provider for expectant mothers that offers self-monitoring solutions.

Hicuity Health (St. Louis). Hicuity Health delivers acute care telemedicine solutions that address health systems’ most pressing needs: improving patient care, mitigating clinical staffing challenges, and increasing the efficiency of care delivery. With an expanding line of services, the company is delivering high acuity remote patient monitoring and care to patients via virtual nursing, tele-ICU, remote telemetry and virtual sitter.

Hippo Technologies (Bellevue, Wash.). Hippo Technologies’ Hippo Virtual Care platform combines the advanced voice-activated, assisted reality headsets and clinical-grade software, allowing clinicians to collaborate remotely in real time to deliver patient care or train healthcare professionals. In addition to supporting remote collaboration and the delivery of specialist care in the field, Hippo can integrate seamlessly with hospital systems and connected devices for a multitude of use cases in the hospital emergency room, operating room, ICU, inpatient units, outpatient clinics, long-term care facilities and in the home.

Hopper Health (Washington, D.C.). Hopper Health is the first virtual primary care and navigation platform created specifically for neurodivergent adults. The company aims to deliver contextual, collaborative care to 31 million neurodivergent adults by connecting them directly to the individualized care they deserve, whether that be care for autism, ADHD, OCD, tourettes, or other conditions.

Howard Medical (Ellisville, Miss.). Howard Medical focuses on solutions for multiple point-of-care technology needs such as medical carts and wall-mounted work stations. The company has a dedicated suite of telehealth solutions that include telehealth carts, telemedicine kits, telehealth technology, telehealth kiosks and more.

Ieso (Boston). Ieso provides digitally enhanced mental healthcare services to providers, private individuals and businesses. The company’s platform and programs provide clinically validated, one-to-one, secure, real-time cognitive behavioral therapy programs.

iHealthHome (Seattle). iHealthHome uses web-based software to facilitate in-home patient monitoring.

Impact Advisors (Naperville, Ill.). Impact Advisors is a healthcare consulting firm dedicated to improving healthcare through technology. It helps clients design, implement and optimize telehealth programs.

Included Health (San Francisco). Included Health delivers all-in-one healthcare combining virtual and in-person care, navigation and advocacy for tens of millions of members nationwide. Trusted by more than 300 employers and health plans, including Walmart, Salesforce, Wells Fargo and Google, the company expanded virtual primary care to more than 15 million people in 2024, all while sustaining a high satisfaction rating. That same year, it launched a specialty care clinic with centers dedicated to cancer, metabolic health and women’s health. The company also secured a first-of-its-kind $464 million at-risk partnership with CalPERS to serve 400,000 members. The company has been recognized with the 2025 Business Intelligence Group “BIG Innovation Award” and Fast Company’s 2024 “Most Innovative Companies” list. 

Infectious Disease Connect (Pittsburgh). Infectious Disease Connect is the only telemedicine company dedicated exclusively to infectious diseases, providing physician consults, antimicrobial stewardship and infection prevention services to hospitals and health systems nationwide. The company’s continuum of services includes adult and pediatric inpatient consults, subspecialty support, and tele-outpatient parenteral antibiotic therapy, reducing unnecessary transfers, lengths of stay and antibiotic overuse. The company has achieved measurable impact, including a 20% reduction in length of stay for infectious disease patients at one partner hospital and $1.25 million in yearly savings for a rural health system through tele-antimicrobial stewardship. The company has expanded into graduate medical education to address shortages in infectious diseases training, while publishing extensively in journals such as Open Forum Infectious Diseases.

Ingenium Healthcare Advisors (Annapolis, Md.). Ingenium Healthcare Advisors partners with healthcare leaders to provide training and strategic planning to clinical and technical staff to improve care delivery.

InStride Health (Boston). InStride Health is an insurance-based provider of evidence-based treatment for children, teens and young adults diagnosed with moderate to severe anxiety and OCD. The company uses an innovative, technology-enhanced approach to improve outcomes and increase access to care.

Integrated Telehealth Partners (West Des Moines, Iowa). Founded in 2010, Integrated Telehealth Partners provides hospitals, community mental health centers, jails and other outpatient facilities with access to experienced psychiatrists, psychiatric nurse practitioners and therapists. The company helps healthcare organizations reduce patient wait times, improve staff satisfaction and enhance outcomes. Integrated Telehealth Partners gives healthcare providers around-the-clock behavioral health coverage, medication evaluation, placement coordination and ongoing therapy options.

IntellaTriage (Brentwood, Tenn.). IntellaTriage provides nurse-based telehealth and triage solutions for physician groups, hospice, ACOs, home health, IDNs, insurers and employers.

Interactive Health Concepts (Scottsdale, Ariz.). Interactive Health Concepts provides telemental healthcare to rural and urban communities.

Iris by OncoHealth (Atlanta). Iris by OncoHealth is a digital care management platform that delivers personalized oncology care. It is the first and only commercial telehealth app on the market providing direct care from trained oncology professionals, and offers members quality, interdisciplinary and personalized cancer care round-the-clock.

Iris Telehealth (Erie, Pa.). Iris Telehealth provides telepsychiatry solutions to care centers in underserved areas.

Iron Bow Technologies (Herndon, Va.). Iron Bow’s consultative and collaborative methodology helps customers select, design, acquire, and integrate telehealth solutions tailored to their individual needs.

Isaac Health (New York City). Isaac Health delivers virtual-first brain health and dementia care, including screening, diagnosis, cognitive therapy and longitudinal management, by combining AI-driven assessments with expert behavioral neurologists and structured care management. Partnerships with health systems, Medicare Advantage plans, ACOs, Pearl Health and Caregiving.com extend access and caregiver support, including participation in CMS’s “GUIDE” model. Outcomes show 92% of patients in cognitive therapy improve within three weeks and 70% remain engaged at six months, demonstrating scalable impact for seniors and caregivers. Recognition includes The Joint Commission’s “Telehealth Accreditation Gold Seal” in 2024, Digital Health New York’s 2025 “New York Digital Health 100”, and multiple awards for virtual dementia care innovation. Isaac Health is guided by a mission of early detection, accessibility, caregiver support and data-driven personalization.

IVCi (Hauppauge, N.Y.). IVCi delivers audio-visual integration, unified communications, video conferencing and voice and cloud services to companies globally, including healthcare companies.

J&B Virtual Solutions (Wixom, Mich.). J&B Virtual Solutions offers telemedicine and remote patient monitoring solutions for healthcare professionals.

Jedmed (St. Louis). Jedmed develops surgical instruments for ENT, ophthalmology and dental procedures, as well as telemedicine equipment like endoscopic video technology.

Jintronix (Montreal, Canada). Jintronix is a virtual rehabilitation system that strives to enhance patient experience by boosting clinical outcomes and delivering progress data to therapists, providers and payers.

K Health (New York City). K Health is an AI-driven primary care company providing 24/7 virtual healthcare to millions in the U.S. through health systems, insurers and a direct-to-consumer mobile app. Its platform uses medical chat and AI predictive models to help physicians optimize diagnosis and treatment. The company is backed by investors such as Valor Equity Partners and Comcast Ventures. 

KagenAir (Appleton, Wis.). KagenAir is a virtual app that demonstrates how the weather and environment affects a person’s health.

KeyCare (Chicago). KeyCare is the first virtual care solution built on Epic’s EHR software. The company’s approach allows seamless integration of patient data and improves care coordination across health systems. KeyCare’s Epic-based platform supports a wide range of virtual care scenarios and has been adopted by major health systems, offering services in pediatrics, primary care, behavioral health and specialties. Their model enhances efficiency, patient experience and clinical outcomes while minimizing IT complexities typically associated with third-party telehealth vendors.

KioWare (York, Pa.). KioWare’s telehealth capabilities include self-service kiosks for billing and lockdown security for browser-based applications.

Krixi Solutions (Cumming, Ga.). Krixi delivers a secure, scalable telemedicine platform as well as a patient outreach platform designed to track patient-reported outcomes.

Languagers (Long Island City, N.Y.). Languagers offers professional interpreting and translation services for the telemedicine industry with 24/7 via phone, video and mobile app.

Learn to Live (Minneapolis). Learn to Live is a digital mental health company offering programs that give people convenient, confidential and easy access mental health tools. The company addresses the most common mental health problems at no cost through their health plan, employer, health system or university. 

Logicalis (Troy, Mich.). Logicalis delivers digital enablement services, such as digital pillars, data center and cloud services, security and network infrastructure as well as workspace communications and collaboration.

Lumens Integration (Freemont, Calif.). An optical product business, Lumens offers telemedicine solutions that allow for video consultations, remotely monitored live surgeries, document cameras, and much more. 

m.Care (Leawood, Kan.). m.Care is a patient engagement and remote monitoring platform used by leading healthcare systems. Patient-centric monitoring plans are customizable and configurable down to the individual patient.

MCIS Language Solutions (Toronto, Canada). MCIS Language Solutions provides translation services to government, legal and police services as well as healthcare organizations.

MDLIVE (Miramar, Fla.). MDLIVE provides patients and health systems access to board-certified physicians and licensed therapists through a secure online video and phone network technology platform.

Mackay Communications, Satellite Solutions Division (Raleigh, N.C.). Mackay Communications’ Satellite Solutions works with organizations to provide satellite telecommunication solutions. The company’s ability to provide appropriate communications channels aids healthcare organizations in coordinating relief, accessing real-time diagnoses and providing medical assistance. 

MaxLife (St. Clair, Mich.). MaxLife provides telemedicine options for pre-hospital diagnosis and care.

MedBridge (Bellevue, Wash.). MedBridge combines powerful digital patient care tools with high quality education to enhance healthcare for patients and providers. Designed with insight gleaned from over 300,000 clinicians and 25 million patients, the company helps thousands of organizations achieve better patient outcomes. 

Medcor (McHenry, Ill.). Medcor navigates employees to the right level of care through onsite and mobile clinics, 24/7 injury and illness triage, physician telemedicine, screenings, testing, safety services and data solutions, improving outcomes while reducing workers’ compensation costs. With over 40 onsite clinics and coverage across approximately 575,000 worksites in all 50 states, its evidence-based, conflict-free health navigation improves profitability, network utilization and return-to-work timelines. In 2024, the triage service answered 90% of calls in under 60 seconds and handled 500,000-plus calls that produced 124,841 claims avoided, 42% first-aid resolution, 98% agreement with nurse recommendations, and less than 1% emergency room referral. A data-driven return on investment model projects six to one returns on average. Recent recognitions include Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve “Patriot” and “Above & Beyond” awards. 

Medici (Austin, Texas). Medici is a virtual healthcare system that matches enrolled users and dependents with a medical team that can assist with primary care, sick care, counseling, condition management, medications, lab work, imaging and more.

Medimaging Integrated Solution (Taiwan). Medimaging Integrated Solutions manufactures telemedicine solutions like a telemedicine cart, along with other product lines. 

MediTelecare (Middletown, Conn.). MediTelecare is an industry leader in providing behavioral healthcare to senior-living facilities via telehealth. The company provides patient-centered services across 26 states.

MedM (Sunnyvale, Calif.). MedM creates remote patient monitoring systems and medical connectivity software. MedM is a pure software engineering company that uses its skills to improve provider success metrics.

Medpod (New York City). Medpod unifies telehealth software, hardware and services to aid healthcare providers in seamless care delivery. The company develops telediagnostic equipment and works with medical device manufacturers, distributors, physicians and health systems.

MedSign International (New York City). MedSign is a telehealth company that creates communication platforms that improve healthcare delivery. The company’s flagship product is called Qortex, and virtually connects hospitals, medical professionals, home care agencies and pharmaceutical companies with patients.

Medsolis (Frisco, Texas). Medsolis is a remote care platform that improves outcomes by nudging patients towards better behavior. Medsolis’ patient solution is holistic and personalized.

Medtronic (Minneapolis). Medtronic is focused on medical devices and technology solutions that monitor patients across the care continuum in the hospital and at home.

Medweb (San Francisco). With more than 1,000 installations worldwide, Medweb delivers secure telemedicine and teleradiology solutions. The company focuses on orthopedics, dermatology, ophthalmology, stroke evaluation, dentistry and general exams.

MeMD (Phoenix). MeMD offers health plans, employers and consumers telemedicine services that connect patients and physicians via audio and video.

Mend (Orlando, Fla.). Mend is a patient engagement and telehealth solution designed for and dedicated to behavioral and mental healthcare organizations. The company has surpassed 15 million patient appointments and serves as the sole patient engagement partner of the National Council for Mental Wellbeing. The company’s customers are now averaging single-digit no-show rates. 

Mercantile Processing (Georgetown, Del.). Mercantile Processing sets up and facilitates telemedicine payments, including credit card approvals.

Mercy Virtual (Chesterfield, Mo.). Mercy Virtual Care Center is a hub for Mercy health system staff and physicians to expand telehealth services and advance innovation in telemedicine.

MetTel (New York City). MetTel provides telehealth infrastructure for mobile devices, enterprise mobile management, vital sensors, procurement and financing and support telecommunications.

MobilDrTech (Pittsburgh). MobilDrTech is a telemedicine systems and equipment integrator that provides cloud-based, HIPAA-compliant video conference platforms and functions for telemedicine equipment manufacturers.

MobileHelp Healthcare (Philadelphia). MobileHelp Healthcare serves a variety of healthcare organizations, including health plans, ACOs, MCOs, hospitals, home health agencies and private care physicians with remote patient monitoring and mobile personal emergency response systems programs.

Modernizing Medicine (Boca Raton, Fla.). Modernizing Medicine and its affiliated companies provide a telemedicine app for various specialties including: dermatology, ophthalmology, orthopedics, plastic surgery/cosmetics, otolaryngology and gastroenterology. It directly integrates with the company’s EHR system.

Monogram Health (Nashville, Tenn.). Monogram Health leads in providing in-home, tech-enhanced clinical care for chronic kidney disease and related conditions. Their multidisciplinary approach integrates telehealth and local provider teams to deliver personalized care plans, including access to specialists, pharmacists and social workers. Monogram’s model significantly reduces hospital admissions and emergency visits while achieving substantial cost savings, benefiting from a fully employed clinical workforce. They continue to expand partnerships with major healthcare providers and innovate through collaborations with clinical experts and research institutions, aiming to advance care outcomes and access for patients nationwide.

mTelehealth (Delray Beach, Fla.). mTelehealth, founded in 2010, is a provider of remote patient monitoring, telemedicine, chronic care management, virtual exam, video visit and related telehealth solutions. The company’s remote health monitoring system, powered by aTouchAway, provides a complete solution to remotely collect, store, and report timely and accurate health information anywhere.

Myowndoctor (Chicago). Myowndoctor is a virtual care platform that promotes healthy living by delivering information on healthcare and connecting patients to providers they know.

MyTelemedicine (McKinney, Texas). The company powers white-label telehealth across a nationwide network of healthcare companies. The company helps providers bring personalized virtual urgent, primary, specialty, behavioral health and chronic care to patients. 

National Consortium of Telehealth Resource Centers (Sacramento, Calif.). Telehealth Resource Centers includes 12 regional centers and two national centers focused on technology assessment and telehealth policy.

Nest Collaborative (Farmington, Conn.). Nest Collaborative is the first and largest virtual lactation platform, providing families with same-day virtual consults seven days a week, prenatally and throughout the duration of breastfeeding. The company is working to shift breastfeeding culture in the U.S. by applying a preventative model to meet recommendations of breastfeeding for a minimum of six months after birth. 

Nextech (Tampa, Fla.). Nextech provides options for patients to meet their needs virtually and offers a fully integrated telehealth solution that seamlessly integrates within existing EHR workflows.

Nokia (Dallas). Nokia creates devices to track and improve activity, sleep, weight, heart health and environmental issues. Some of the devices include wireless blood pressure monitors and Wi-Fi-enabled scales.

Nonin Medical (Plymouth, Minn.). Nonin Medical focuses on medical monitoring technologies and products, such as pulse and regional oximeters, capnographs, sensors and software.

Novotalk (New York City). Novotalk offers self-guided therapy through a web-based platform to help people who stutter gain and maintain fluent speech.

NuPhysicia (Houston). NuPhysicia focuses on telemedicine services for correctional healthcare, indigent populations, scientific exploration and employee health.

NuraLogix (Toronto, Canada). NuraLogix specializes in affective AI and developed the world’s first contactless blood pressure measurement technology. Their DeepAffex platform uses transdermal optical imaging to measure over 100 health parameters via conventional video cameras. The company’s solutions enable rapid health assessments using smartphones, tablets or a smart mirror, catering to various health scenarios. NuraLogix collaborates with global clients to enhance health programs.

NuView Health (Boca Raton, Fla.). NuView Health is a telehealth solutions provider with a physician network that supports millions of patient encounters.

Ochsner CareConnect 360 (New Orleans). Ochsner CareConnect 360 is Ochsner Health System’s telehealth program, which is designed to support on-site coverage for patients that need specialty services and includes remote monitoring technology for critical patients.

OpenLoop (Des Moines, Iowa). OpenLoop aims to remove the roadblocks that come with launching and scaling telehealth services, so that healthcare providers can focus on serving patients. The company’s network of clinicians includes physicians, nurse practitioners and specialists throughout the U.S. OpenLoop’s technology helps streamline licensing, credentialing, hiring, onboarding, scheduling, payroll and EHR management.

Ophelia (New York City). Ophelia is a digital provider of medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder. The company is committed to making evidence-based treatment universally accessible and removing barriers to care.

OrthoLive (Cincinnati). OrthoLive is the world’s first and now the largest orthopedic telemedicine provider. Built by orthopedists for orthopedists, the OrthoLive communication platform provides secure access to video-based patient care while increasing efficiency, practice revenue, and patient satisfaction for providers.

Oscar Health (New York City). Oscar Health is a health insurance company founded in 2012, focused on using a full stack technology platform to improve member experiences. The company serves over 1 million members, offering individual, family and small group plans. It also provides a technology platform, +Oscar, for providers and payers. The company aims to make healthcare more accessible and affordable by improving care delivery and member engagement and by offering virtual care options.

OTTO Health (Boulder, Colo.). OTTO is a HIPAA-compliant telehealth platform that enables video visits and schedule management between providers and their patients.

Ovatient (Cleveland). Ovatient partners with health systems to deliver virtual-first primary care, urgent care and integrated behavioral health built on Epic and MyChart, enabling near–real-time data sharing, coordinated referrals, labs and pharmacy services. Created by Cleveland-based The MetroHealth System and Charleston, S.C.-based MUSC Health, the company embeds technology, clinical operations and care teams to extend system reach while keeping care within trusted local networks. Since launching with MetroHealth in spring 2024, Ovatient has served over 25,000 patients in Northeast Ohio, gone live at MUSC Health, and projects more than 90,000 visits over the next year. In Greater Cleveland, the program generated over 9,000 referrals to MetroHealth and 15,000 prescriptions filled in MetroHealth pharmacies, exemplified by end-to-end same-day virtual-to-in-person testing and home medication delivery. Recent launches include integrated behavioral health and “MyCare Anywhere”, an EHR-integrated, omnichannel engagement experience that offers personalized content and self-guided health journeys to advance value-based goals.

Oxitone Medical (Hartford, Conn.). Oxitone Medical developed a bracelet with oxygen saturation, pulse and motion biosensors as well as a companion patient management app for continuous patient monitoring and transition care services.

PatientClick (San Diego, Calif.). PatientClick provides an integrated video-based telemedicine platform as a software-as-a-service with EHR and practice management solutions. The company also provides an on-demand telemedicine platform.

Pexip (Oslo, Norway). Pexip’s virtualized meeting platform is designed for web conferencing across compatible technologies and can run in a healthcare organization’s data center as well as public, private or hybrid cloud environments.

Phzio Digital Health Solutions (Ontario, Canada). Phzio is focused on providing employers with digital tools that encourage and support their physical health journeys.

Pipeline Rx (Greenwood Village, Colo.). Pipeline Rx has a cloud-based technology platform, PowerGridRx, that connects hospital and care providers with trained clinical pharmacists. It has around 400 million data points flowing through the system each year.

PlushCare (San Francisco). PlushCare delivers virtual primary care, clinically based weight management and mental health services in all 50 states, emphasizing long-term doctor–patient relationships and evidence-based care across 6,800-plus conditions. Its clinical weight program combines personalized coaching, labs and, when appropriate, FDA-approved medications such as GLP-1s, with ongoing check-ins and monitoring to sustain results and reduce regain. In 2020, PlushCare joined Accolade in a $450 million transaction to create Accolade Care, and in 2024 the company began accepting Medicare Part B to expand access for 64-plus million beneficiaries by removing transportation barriers and shortening wait times. In 2025 Accolade’s acquisition by Transcarent extended the platform’s reach to a combined audience of roughly 20 million people.

pMD (San Francisco). pMD is a combination of software and services that makes it easy to provide the best possible care, whether in-person or virtual. The company offers both a free HIPAA-compliant app as well as a comprehensive, integrated, telemedicine platform, to streamline workflows and engage patients.

Poly (San Jose, Calif.). Poly provides video collaboration solutions that support telehealth and telemedicine, care coordination as well as medical and patient education.

Prevounce Health (Indianapolis). Prevounce Health provides cloud software, cellular-connected Pylo devices, and services that streamline remote patient monitoring, chronic and advanced primary care management, preventive care and annual wellness visits for healthcare organizations. The Pylo portfolio spans blood pressure, weight, glucose and pulse oximetry, which now includes a new cellular pulse oximeter, and has captured 15 million-plus patient-submitted readings to power connected-care programs. The blood pressure monitor is clinically validated and FDA-cleared for use during pregnancy to remotely monitor for gestational hypertension, supporting safer obstetric care pathways. Prevounce recently launched an advanced primary care management platform and scaled its care-management team to strengthen patient outreach and program performance. The company was named to Purpose Jobs’ “Top Tech Companies in Indianapolis to Watch” in 2025. 

ProAssurance (Birmingham, Ala.). ProAssurance is a healthcare liability insurer that focuses on handling claims and medical liability, as well as mitigating the risks that come along with telemedicine. 

Professional Risk Management Services (Arlington, Va.). Professional Risk Management Services provides liability insurance for individual healthcare providers, groups, practices, associations and organizations, including telepsychiatry and forensic services.

Pulsara (Bozeman, Mont.). Pulsara is a telehealth communication platform that connects teams across organizations. What makes Pulsara unique is its ability to enable dynamic networked communications for any illness or injury. With Pulsara, clinicians can add a new organization, team, or specialist to any patient event, dynamically building a care team even as the patient condition and location are constantly evolving.

Q-rounds (Minneapolis). Q-rounds provides an in-hospital digital health solution that sends real-time updates to patients, families and the care team regarding when to expect their doctor to arrive for inpatient rounds. Beyond just time transparency, the company offers one-click telehealth for those who can’t be bedside, so they can remotely join rounds. This saves hospitals money, too, by increasing hospital throughput, improving patient satisfaction and decreasing medical errors. 

Qler (Reston, Va.). Qler is a telepsychiatry provider for emergency departments that is used in dozens of hospitals across the nation. Hospital emergency departments can use the company for consults and work with patients that have mental health issues. In 2021, the company became one of the first to be accredited under The Joint Commission’s new technology based program and earned its Gold Seal of Approval for behavioral health and human services. 

RedBox Rx (West Des Moines, Iowa). RedBox Rx, a subsidiary of Hy-Vee, provides low-cost national telehealth and online pharmacy services with specialties in mental health, men’s and women’s health, and nearly 30 additional conditions. Patients ages 18 and older can access live video or chat visits with licensed providers, with mental health visits starting at $25 and other consults ranging from free to $39, with no insurance required. In 2024, RedBox Rx achieved record sales, launched a new mobile app for scheduling and care management, and expanded into weight management with medications and virtual dietitian consultations. The company also introduced affordable, pay-as-you-go online therapy sessions to remove cost barriers to mental health care. Backed by Hy-Vee’s 55 years of pharmacy expertise, RedBox Rx is experiencing rapid nationwide growth while prioritizing affordability and access.

Redivus Health (Overland Park, Kan.). Redivus Health’s mobile app, combined with cloud services, provides protocol for cardiac arrest, stroke and sepsis to enhance diagnostic and treatment accuracy.

Reflexion Health (Hayward, Calif.). Reflexion Health is a rehabilitation therapy company dedicated to evidence-based technology that can help patients recover at home, including remote support and monitoring for physical therapy exercises.

Reliq Health (Ontario, Canada). Reliq Health provides remote patient monitoring, telemedicine and care collaboration solutions to healthcare providers in the U.S., Canada and Europe.

RelyMD (Atlanta). RelyMD gives patients access to board-certified physicians with prescribing capabilities any time of the day by phone or video conferencing.

RemedyConnect (Centennial, Colo.). Remedy is a telehealth startup that offers a standalone benefit for employers, groups and payroll companies to deliver primary care telemedicine, teletherapy and pharmacy discounts.

Rhinogram (Chattanooga, Tenn.). Rhinogram provides HIPAA-compliant virtual care through its telehealth platform.

Ria Health (San Francisco). Ria Health offers personalized treatment for alcoholism via its mobile app.

Rula Health (Los Angeles). Rula Health provides affordable, high-quality mental and behavioral healthcare through a network of over 9,000 licensed providers. They offer therapy and psychiatric services to individuals, couples and families, partnering with major insurance networks to cover over 100 million individuals. Founded in 2019 and recently rebranded from Path Mental Health, Rula focuses on evidence-based, outcome-driven care and supports providers by handling administrative tasks. Their mission is to make mental healthcare accessible and effective for everyone.

ScienceSoft USA (McKinney, Texas). ScienceSoft has specialized in healthcare IT consulting and custom software development since 2005, completing more than 150 projects in the medical sector. The company employs over 750 IT professionals. The company’s portfolio spans patient-facing solutions such as telemedicine, remote patient monitoring and wellness apps, which consistently achieve over 95% user satisfaction scores, as well as clinician-focused tools like EHR, health information exchange and inventory tracking systems, often delivered 20–40% ahead of schedule and generating annual client savings of up to $7 million. Its expertise in AI, big data and machine learning has enabled diagnostic and imaging solutions with 90–95% accuracy, while in-house regulatory specialists ensure compliance. Recent projects include a wearable-based remote physiotherapy platform for AKLOS Health and a lung cancer detection platform for bioAffinity Technologies.

Second Opinion Telemedicine Solutions (Torrance, Calif.). Second Opinion Telemedicine Solutions has a software platform designed for telehealth services across multiple specialties and the Second Opinion Enterprise, a comprehensive telehealth portal solution.

SecondOpinions.com (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.). SecondOpinion.com is an online service powered by an automated platform, designed to provide second opinions on a broad range of medical fields. 

SecureVideo (San Antonio, Texas). SecureVideo is a secure, HIPAA compliant telehealth platform that is ideal for healthcare practices with a variety of use cases. Its easily-configurable features include group sessions, e-documents, and cloud recording, and a dedicated support team is always available for assistance.

Senscio Systems (Gardner, Mass.). Senscio Systems’ Ibis solution provides an AI-based comprehensive health management program for individuals with complex chronic conditions. The technology realizes the earliest signs of health issues and engages members to take self-rescue actions.

Sensely (San Francisco). Sensely is an AI clinical avatar for triage and continuous controls monitoring that includes a virtual clinician patient engagement solution, an empathetic avatar and chat bot technology.

SilverCloud Health (Boston). SilverCloud, part of Boston-based Amwell, provides outcomes-focused online behavioral health and wellbeing solutions, with its digital platform customizable for the provider’s needs.

SohoMD (New York City). SohoMD is an online mental health platform that focuses on comprehensive biological psychiatry. Now available in 20 states and growing, the practice offers a combination of modalities, supplements, nutrition and lifestyle changes that work in tandem with talk-based therapies and medicines. Their team of internal specialists provides integrated mental health services, and considers numerous evidence-based treatments before crafting customized a plan for each patient.

Solutionz (Pacific Palisades, Calif.). Founded in 2001, Solutionz provides video conferencing and audio collaboration solutions and services for healthcare providers.

Specialist TeleMed (Denver). Specialist TeleMed is a physician-led and Joint Commission-accredited telemedicine company providing 24-plus medical and surgical specialties to hospitals, clinics, and remote worksites. The company provides customized cost-efficient specialty care to uniquely match the needs of any size healthcare facility seeking immediate access to board-certified physicians. 

Spencer Health Solutions (Morrisville, N.C.). Spencer Health Solutions, Inc. addresses the critical unmet need to better engage and support patients in their homes while understanding the impact of their participation in drug trials through a direct-to-patient, in-home platform that combines medication dispensing, telehealth and engagement so patients, their health care providers, and clinical research teams stay connected.

StationMD (Maplewood, N.J.). StationMD is a physician service dedicated to individuals with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities, along with other vulnerable populations.

SteadyMD (St. Louis). SteadyMD is a business-to-business telehealth infrastructure provider that powers high-quality telehealth patient experiences. The company enables its partners to scale their telehealth offerings quickly and efficiently nationwide by offering licensed clinician workforce, clinical operations, legal and regulatory guidance, and world-class product and technology.

Stone Three.Health (Cape Town, South Africa). Stone Three.Health advances virtual primary care with telemedicine, remote patient monitoring, and machine-learning–driven software and services. Its flagship “Telesensi” platform enables live tele-auscultation, streaming high-fidelity digital heart and lung sounds during online consultations to bring physical exam data into virtual visits. Telesensi Cardiac brings high-accuracy detection and classification of heart murmurs, supporting earlier identification of cardiac pathology. The company also delivers smart-hospital video analytics that use cameras and AI to augment nursing workflows and enhance patient safety.

Straight Teeth Direct (London, U.K.). Straight Teeth Direct is a teledentistry app and platform connecting adults with orthodontists for diagnosis, treatment and supervision of teeth straightening.

Stroke Link Health (Franklin, Tenn.). Stroke Link Health’s care management and telehealth model integrates today’s silos of care for stroke patients and their families all the way from hospitalization to at-home recovery across an entire year.

Survivor Healthcare (Salt Lake City). Survivor Healthcare is a telehealth platform that delivers specialized supportive care to cancer patients from the point of diagnosis through treatment and remission. Patients receive care from a multidisciplinary team of oncology-trained specialists, including a mental health counselor, registered dietitian, occupational therapist and an advanced practice provider.

SwyMed (Lexington, Mass.). SwyMed’s telemedicine technology connects patients with physicians in a real-time video conference. The company focuses on professionals in community paramedicine, home healthcare, emergency medical services, and critical transport and telestroke services.

Symbian Health (Marlborough, Mass.). Symbian Health provides integrated telehospitalist solutions, including remote hospitalists and remote cross coverage to hospitals in addition to services such as remote case management and medication reconciliation.

SynsorMed (Atlanta). SynsorMed’s telehealth solution is integrated into provider EHRs to connect physicians with their existing patients.

T-MedRobotics (Scottsdale, Ariz.). T-MedRobotics provides ultrasonography for isolated patients through telemedicine, supported by an expert center.

TIMS Medical (Chelmsford, Mass.). TIMS Medical is a networked system that allows physicians, technicians, students, residents, fellows and subspecialty consultants to participate in surgery or diagnostic imaging procedures from remote locations.

Talkiatry (New York City). Talkiatry is a physician-led, fully virtual psychiatry practice with over 500 psychiatrists and more than 100 therapists across 43 states, offering in-network care with eligible clinicians averaging over 10 years of experience. Patients match with a psychiatrist in minutes and book within days for 60-minute evaluations and 30-minute follow-ups, covering a broad spectrum of conditions. Clinical quality is reinforced by rigorous diagnostics, medication-safety protocols, emergency escalation pathways and outcomes monitoring. An internal analysis showed 67% resolution of clinically significant anxiety and 62% remission for moderate to severe depression after 15 weeks. Partnerships with health systems and national payers support integrated, value-based care, with a payer analysis showing 68% fewer hospitalizations and 32% fewer emergency department visits. The company saw 1.85 million completed visits in 2025, total funding of $245 million, and accolades such as CB Insights’ “Digital Health 50” and repeated recognition as a top workplace.

Talkspace (New York City). Founded in 2012 as the first platform to text a licensed therapist from anywhere, Talkspace now delivers comprehensive digital behavioral health with more than 6,000 therapists and prescribers, plus self-guided tools and live streaming content. An NYU-developed algorithm for detecting suicidal ideation and self-harm has flagged over 45,000 risk cases at approximately 83% accuracy since its 2019 integration, strengthening platform safety. Partnerships with Cigna, Aetna, TRICARE contractors and Medicare provide in-network access for nearly 200 million lives, typically matching members to a provider within 1–2 days. Public-health collaborations have also expanded free therapy for youth, with engagement concentrated in equity-priority communities. The company pairs quality and clinician enablement with a strong culture recognized by Crain‘s New York “Best Places to Work” in 2023 and 2024.

Tech4Life Enterprises (Ontario, Canada). Tech4Life Enterprises provides telemedicine solutions, mobile health, health information systems and elearning to strengthen health systems.

TelaCare (Fishers, Ind.). TelaCare enables patients to connect with board-certified physicians, licensed therapists and medical specialists through secure phone calls, video or a mobile app.

Teladoc Health (New York City). Teladoc Health provides integrated clinical solutions including telehealth, expert medical opinions, AI and analytics.

Teledentistry.com (Las Vegas). Teledentistry.com provides 24/7 virtual dental consultations for urgent oral health needs, connecting patients to licensed clinicians in real time. The platform’s mission is to improve oral health through digital access to care and clinician guidance. Recent technology upgrades added integrated photo assessments and enhanced access features that streamline triage and treatment recommendations. A new partnership with Delta Dental extends virtual access to care to more than 37 million members, accelerating timely interventions and reducing unnecessary emergency room visits. By bringing emergency dental expertise to patients wherever they are, Teledentistry.com closes critical care gaps and supports payer and provider networks with scalable, always-on access.

Telehealth.org (San Diego). Telehealth.org offers telemental and telebehavioral health training, consulting and staffing assistance with personal training delivered to over 56,000 medical and behavioral health specialists across 109 countries.

Telemedicine.com (Cameron Park, Calif.). Telemedicine.com provides assistance with creating a telemedicine clinic, including grant writing through system installation.

TeleSpecialists (Fort Myers, Fla.). TeleSpecialists supports telemedicine as an effective method to increase patient retention and maximize patient satisfaction, with consultation services to develop telestroke and teleneurology programs.

Terason (Burlington, Mass.). Terason focuses on telemedicine via portable ultrasound systems, including the uSmart products for quality imaging and functionality.

Therapractic Management Systems (Lubbock, Texas). Therapractic Management Systems provides online office assistance for behavioral health practices and manages risk with HIPAA-based training and Medicare and Medicaid sensitive notes.

Thinklabs (Centennial, Colo.). Thinklabs One provides a stethoscope for telemedicine and mobile health applications that can connect with multiple platforms to record and share sound.

TigerConnect (Santa Monica, Calif.). TigerConnect is a cloud-native platform trusted by healthcare organizations. The patient communication solution, Patient Engagement, allows healthcare professionals to communicate with patients, families and specialists through voice, video or text.

TimelyCare (Fort Worth, Texas). TimelyCare is the leading virtual health and wellbeing solution for higher education. Its mission is to improve the health and wellbeing of college students by making virtual medical and mental health care accessible anytime, anywhere. It includes a range of services, including mental health counseling, on-demand emotional support, medical care, psychiatric care, health coaching, basic needs assistance, faculty and staff guidance, peer support and digital self-care resources.

TouchPointCare (Libertyville, Ill.). TouchPointCare is a telehealth and communication platform providing remote patient monitoring and patient engagement programs in the home.

TransGlobal Care (New York City). TransGlobal provides viral testing and remote patient monitoring services, specializing in point–of-care treatment for the elderly and patients with chronic conditions.

TriageLogic (Jacksonville, Fla.). TriageLogic offers ContinuWell, a custom health and wellness product for employers. The product features 24/7 telemedicine services, helping organizations decrease overall employee healthcare expenses and sick days. 

TytoCare (New York City). TytoCare connects people with clinicians through its TytoHome for consumers, TytoPro for professionals and TytoClinic for remote point-of-care services.

UCM Digital Health (New York City). UCM offers holistic digitally integrated healthcare via a digital front door platform, a team of providers, and a 24/7 telehealth triage. 

URAC (Washington, D.C.). URAC’s telehealth accreditation program certifies telemedicine providers including physicians, nurses, hospital systems and health plans. The evaluation occurs within three days of registering and the process typically takes four months or less.

Updox (Dublin, Ohio). Updox by EverHealth is a complete healthcare communication platform for in-person and virtual care. Through an all-in-one platform, Updox provides a broad set of capabilities for virtual health, patient engagement and paperless office efficiency that work together to reduce costs and drive revenue.

Valant (Seattle). Valant is a cloud-based integrated EHR software suite that supports the administrative operations of behavioral healthcare practitioners, agencies and clinicians. Built exclusively for behavioral health practices, Valant’s integrated telehealth includes all the features providers need to create secure, interactive remote patient experiences.

Validic (Durham, N.C.). Founded in 2010, Validic is a digital health company that uses the world’s largest health IoT platform and EHR-embedded remote care application to provide personalized care and improve healthcare efficiency. Their platform handles more billions of annual data transactions, aiding healthcare providers in chronic condition management and remote care. In May 2024, Validic acquired Trapollo, a connected health, technical support and device logistics provider, enhancing its capabilities in connected health and home care support.

VeeOne (Roseville, Calif.). VeeMed is a global telemedicine company focused on virtual clinical patient healthcare services and advanced telemedicine technology in chronic care, nephrology, pulmonary medicine, neurology and mental healthcare.

VideoConnex (Sanford, Fla.). VideoConnex is a consulting firm that provides a network collaboration infrastructure for multisite interactive collaboration at world sporting events, among other occasions.

Virtual Care and Digital Health by Providence (Renton, Wash.). Virtual Care and Digital Health provides virtual clinical support, including telestroke, telepsychiatry and telehospitalist. The team, which includes dedicated providers and digitally connected in-network providers, addresses workflow demand surges and closes clinical talent gaps.

VisionFlex (New South Wales, Australia). VisionFlex designs and manufactures telehealth devices and high-grade video imaging systems for healthcare applications.

Vitalchat (Raleigh, N.C.). Vitalchat provides hospital systems and other healthcare facilities with the only inpatient telehealth solutions that enable providers to monitor and treat up to 100 patients from a single workstation. Leveraging video AI and seamless integration with other technology partners, the company works to define the hospital room of the future cost effectively and at scale, all while enhancing the human experience.

ViTel Net (McLean, Va.). ViTel Net has pioneered telehealth for more than 35 years, with “vCareCommand:, an enterprise clinical workflow and interoperability platform, providing seamless single sign-on to patient data across virtual care service lines. Its zero-code, configurable architecture adapts to existing workflows so health systems can launch and scale synchronous and asynchronous programs quickly and cost-effectively. Embedded collaboration, documentation, workflow management and business intelligence tools elevate clinician efficiency and patient experience while delivering systemwide insights. Recent milestones include integrating digital health company Kahun’s AI clinical assessment to automate intake and write results to the EHR, incorporating on-demand interpreter services with Language Services Associates, and supporting East Carolina University’s North Carolina Statewide Telepsychiatry Program to expand rural access. The company was selected to lead the National Emergency TeleCritical Care Network by the U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command’s Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center.

Vivify Health (Eden Prairie, Minn.). Vivify Health, an Optum company, has a mobile, cloud-based platform that powers remote care management through personalized care plans, biometric data monitoring and patient education. It has partnered with Ascension, UPMC Magee Women’s Hospital and University Health Network in Toronto on projects.

VSee (San Jose, Calif.). VSee is a telehealth system that serves NASA, GE Health, Optum and LA County, among other healthcare providers. The company offers tools for video, voice, chat and medical exams, and remote patient monitoring.

Vyopta (Austin, Texas). Vyopta optimizes the performance of video and voice collaboration by providing monitoring and analytics to optimize multiple collaboration platforms and overcome the challenges of supporting large video environments. The platform has been adopted by healthcare organizations to support telemedicine delivery.

WOMBA (Queens, N.Y.). WOMBA (World Medical Bank Account) collects data from multiple apps, including sports apps, medical apps and nutrition apps, as well as medical records, and aggregates them in one place.

WebRTC.ventures (Charlottesville, Va.). WebRTC.ventures’ medical services platform connects two or more users in private, secure video connections that allow the users to videoconference and share audio, video and data files.

Wildflower Health (San Francisco). Wildflower Health is a women’s health solutions company focused on digital and value-based care, improving outcomes through technology and telehealth. The company offers a comprehensive suite, including virtual and in-home lactation appointments nationwide, supporting patients from prenatal to postpartum with evidence-based guidance. Partnering with organizations like Healthcare Transformation Consortium, Wildflower implements value-based maternity care models that integrate digital platforms to enhance patient engagement, remote monitoring and care coordination. Their goal is to transform maternity care delivery by aligning stakeholders and leveraging technology to ensure safe, effective and convenient healthcare experiences for women across various health systems.

XBOSoft (Reston, Va.). XBOSoft offers AI-informed software quality assurance and testing services. The company is focused on providing tools to small and mid-sized companies, including healthcare organizations. 

YouThisMe (Hudson, N.Y.). YouThisMe offers a seamless, secure, HIPAA-compliant and simple-to-use remote patient monitoring system that allows patients to remain in their homes while giving providers essential information for managing chronic conditions and avoiding hospital readmissions.

Zoom (San Jose, Calif.). Zoom’s platform includes audio, video and screen-sharing capabilities for HIPAA-compliant telemedicine, telepsychiatry, telehome care and training.

The post 265+ telehealth companies to know | 2025 appeared first on Becker’s Hospital Review | Healthcare News & Analysis.

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