AirStrip, a San Antonio, TX-based company integrating mobile health and IT technologies, has raised $25 million in a strategic funding round that includes new and existing investors.
In a statement, AirStrip says the capital would be used to support the continued expansion of its AirStrip ONE mobile technology platform, introduce its technology to the home health market, expand overseas, and apply analytics capabilities to the healthcare data it is collecting.
“The success of this investment round shows deep industry support and validation of the AirStrip strategic vision,” AirStrip CEO Alan Portela says in the statement. “Right now, one in six babies born in the U.S. is monitored with AirStrip, and at-risk patients were monitored 1.2 million times in 2013 alone.”
One of the new investors is San Diego’s Gary and Mary West Health Investment Fund, which previously put $4 million into Sense4Baby, a startup developing remote maternal-fetal monitoring technology that AirStrip acquired five months ago. Leerink Partners, the Boston investment bank that specializes in healthcare deals, also was a new investor in the round.
Two other new investors are both AirStrip customers: Dignity Health, a San Francisco-based not-for-profit health system, operates more than 380 hospitals, clinics, and other care centers in 20 states; and St. Joseph’s Health, based in Irvine, CA, operates 16 acute care hosptals, skilled nursing facilities, and other care centers in Texas, California, and eastern New Mexico.
In addition, AirStrip said its existing investors, which include San Diego-based Qualcomm (NASDAQ: [[ticker]], Menlo Park, CA-based Sequoia Capital, the Wellcome Trust (a charitable foundation based in London), and Hospital Corp of America (NYSE: [[ticker:HCA]]), also participated in the deal.
In early 2012, AirStrip disclosed a collaboration with Qualcomm Life that has been integrating AirStrip’s patient monitoring technologies with the Qualcomm Life 2net wireless health technology platform. Qualcomm also made an undisclosed strategic investment in AirStrip at that time.
In an e-mail yesterday, Portela said the company does not publicly disclose how much total capital it has raised since it was founded in 2004 as AirStrip Technologies. Portela confirmed that AirStrip’s previous funding round was almost two years ago, when the Wellcome Trust made an undisclosed investment that Dow Jones reported was at least $10 million.
The company currently has 140 employees, Portela said.
“We provide [the] ONE mobile platform and ONE mobile application, providing front-end integration from multiple data types (medical devices, EMRs [electronic medical records], video, images, secure messaging, etc.) supporting multiple care settings (acute, post-acute, and home monitoring), as well as multiple care givers (doctors, nurses, case managers, etc.),” Portela wrote.
AirStrip’s mobile technology platform works with mobile devices based on a variety of operating systems, including Apple iOS, Android, Windows 8, and others, he added. “Our concept of [mobile health] is about the mobile consumer and not the device (since we provide a seamless native experience on all form factors—phone, tablet, laptop, and desktop).