Healthcare is the only place where even a radiologist can get lost in the maze. That irony is not funny when it is your mother staring down pancreatic cancer and the system still makes you fill out forms like you are applying for a store credit card. That moment hit Jeremy Gurewitz hard. Not as a headline. As a son. And from that friction came Solace Health.
This week Solace Health locked in $130M in Series C funding, led by IVP, pushing the company past a $1B valuation. Unicorn status in a space that usually moves like molasses in January. Existing backers Menlo Ventures, SignalFire, Torch Capital, Inspired Capital, and RiverPark Ventures doubled down. Smart money does not chase noise. It follows traction. And Solace Health has plenty.
Founded in 2022 by Jeremy Gurewitz, Co-Founder and CEO, and Sara Sargent, Co-Founder and Chief Product Officer, Solace Health was built on a simple but uncomfortable truth. The healthcare system is complex by design, and complexity always charges interest. The company created a national advocacy platform that pairs patients and families with professional advocates who handle the logistics, the scheduling, the insurance puzzles, the in-network scavenger hunts. More than 2,000 advocates. Over 20,000 patients served each month. 10x year over year growth. That is not hype. That is velocity.
The name Solace is doing real work here. In a system that often feels cold and coded, Solace Health inserts humanity between diagnosis and decision. Phone, video, text, email. Real people, real coordination, wrapped in a HIPAA compliant, full stack platform that integrates with payer and provider workflows. Not concierge fluff for the wealthy. Advocacy as a covered benefit through Medicare, Medicare Advantage, employers, and health plans. Infrastructure, not indulgence.
This is what happens when product vision meets lived experience. Sara Sargent has shaped the platform to operationalize empathy at scale. That is harder than it sounds. You are not just building software. You are orchestrating trust across fragmented systems. You are turning chaos into choreography without missing a beat.
The lesson for founders is clear. Start with a scar, not a slide deck. Solve something that hurts. Prove it with outcomes. Then invite capital to amplify what is already working. IVP did not write a $130M check on vibes. They saw a platform positioned to make advocacy standard, not optional.
Healthcare does not need more apps. It needs alignment. Solace Health is betting that when you give patients a guide, the entire system moves better. And if nearly 40% of Americans delay care because the maze is too much, the market is not a niche. It is a mandate.

