OpenAI did not buy Torch because healthcare is fashionable. It bought Torch because memory is leverage, and modern healthcare runs on short term recall. On Jan 12, 2026, OpenAI agreed to acquire Torch, a San Francisco startup barely a year old, for about $100M. The reporting broke via The Information, founded by Jessica Lessin, and within hours Reuters, CNBC, TechCrunch, and Axios confirmed the spine of the deal. When that many serious desks align that fast, it is not noise. It is architecture moving underneath the floor.
Torch came out of scar tissue. Ilya Abyzov, Adrian Aoun, Eugene Huang, James Hamlin, and Ryan Oman all helped build Forward Health, a company that raised $400M+ trying to modernize care delivery and learned the expensive lesson that glossy clinics do not fix broken data. Torch went upstream. The thesis was sharp. AI cannot reason about health if it forgets. Labs here, meds there, notes buried in portals nobody logs into. Torch was designed as a unified medical memory, something that understands time, context, and consequence instead of treating every question like it was born five seconds ago.
The timing is the tell. Days earlier, OpenAI launched ChatGPT Health, with 230M+ weekly users already asking health questions and enterprise deployments landing inside HCA Healthcare, Boston Children’s Hospital, Cedars Sinai, UCSF, Stanford Medicine Children’s Health, and Memorial Sloan Kettering. One day before the acquisition, Anthropic launched Claude for Healthcare. Then OpenAI lit the Torch. Not as a feature. As infrastructure. A system that ingests labs, meds, records, and wearables, normalizes them, and keeps them accessible for reasoning without feeding patient data back into model training.
Ilya Abyzov now leads that integration. Adrian Aoun returns to the mission he started years ago, this time with distribution measured in hundreds of millions. Eugene Huang and James Hamlin bring years of clinical software discipline. Ryan Oman keeps continuity intact. Sam Altman approved the move. Albert Lee, newly appointed as VP of Corporate Development, helped shape it. This is not a bet on an app. It is a bet on who owns memory when AI stops being reactive and starts staying present.
The pressure this creates is real. If AI holds longitudinal context, EHRs become storage, not strategy. If consumers trust one interface to remember their health better than any portal ever has, switching costs invert overnight. This is not about replacing clinicians. It is about finally letting intelligence see the whole picture without losing the thread.

