WellBeam just reminded the healthcare world that momentum is not an accident, it is architecture. When a company founded on a Stanford cycling ride between Amee Devani and Pascal Odek turns into a platform that major health systems now treat as mission critical infrastructure, you realize this was never a casual spin around campus. It was the warmup lap for a race that every hospital, physician group, and post acute provider has been trying to finish for a decade. The $10 million Series A led by Wittington Ventures, with F Prime Capital, Advocate Health, and Oncology Ventures joining in, is not just capital flowing in. It is the market raising its hand and admitting that the status quo of faxes, phone tag, and missing care orders has overstayed its welcome.
WellBeam is living up to its name, bringing light to the darkest corners of modern care delivery. Post-acute transitions have always been the industry’s blind spot, the place where great clinicians lose visibility and patients fall through cracks no chart audit can fully capture. Yet the platform that Amee Devani and Pascal Odek built does the opposite. It beams real time data straight into Epic and other EMRs, it captures CMS G codes that clinics never saw, and it cuts documentation lag from weeks to days. You know you are onto something when health systems see a 20-30% drop in readmissions and physicians quietly realize they have been leaving hundreds of thousands of dollars per clinic on the table every year.
The investor lineup says a lot about where this is heading. Advocate Health did not just write a check. They deployed the platform across Atrium Health Medical Group, a network with 400+ locations that does not test toys. Oncology Ventures backed the company after watching oncology practices fight through workflow chaos for years. F Prime Capital doubled down because healthcare’s future belongs to the systems that can actually connect with the post acute world instead of hoping for a lucky outcome. And Wittington Ventures, guided by Megh Gupta’s healthcare portfolio instincts, made it clear they see the network effects play forming before most competitors have even mapped the lanes.
What makes this story hit harder is how much groundwork WellBeam quietly built while everyone else chased buzzwords. Direct Epic integration. AWS HealthLake infrastructure. HL7 FHIR pipelines instead of empty promises about interoperability. A two sided network that grows stronger with every physician group and every home health agency that connects. None of this is glamorous, but every piece of it solves the parts of healthcare people usually rant about at conferences and then ignore the moment the panel ends.
The team scaling this is equally dialed in. With growth driven by leaders like Roy Surges, Stephen Wong, Monishika Gupta, Sean Fitzsimmons, and Thanatad Ruengsuksilp, WellBeam is running a tight, focused roster that feels more like a championship squad than an early stage startup. That is exactly how a company jumps 350% in growth while still operating with the calm precision of a seasoned operator.
This Series A is fuel, but the engine was already built. Now the market gets to see how far it can run.
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