WellBeam Raises $10M to Transform Acute-to-Post-Acute Interoperability
WellBeam, a healthtech company focused on solving the longstanding interoperability gap between acute and post-acute providers, has raised $10 million in Series A funding. The round was led by Wittington Ventures, with participation from F-Prime, Advocate Health, Oncology Ventures, Atrium Health and other strategic investors. The investment will accelerate the company’s efforts to build seamless, EMR-integrated workflows that enable hospitals, physician groups and post-acute partners to coordinate patient care more effectively and reduce unplanned readmissions.
The new capital positions WellBeam to scale its interoperability infrastructure across the US healthcare system at a time when hospitals face mounting pressure to improve care transitions, reduce administrative burden and prevent unnecessary bounce-backs into acute settings.
WellBeam is Fixing One of Healthcare’s Most Persistent Problems
The transition from hospital or ambulatory care to home or post-acute services remains one of the most fragmented phases in a patient’s care journey. Different providers often rely on separate electronic medical record (EMR) systems that do not communicate with one another, resulting in missing or delayed clinical updates, manual coordination and gaps in follow-up care.
This lack of data sharing contributes to costly readmissions, administrative inefficiencies and poor patient outcomes.This is a major issue WellBeam was designed to solve.
“WellBeam’s connected provider network and EMR-integrated workflows directly address the longstanding interoperability challenges that have limited progress in this area,” said Megh Gupta, managing partner at Wittington Ventures.

WellBeam’s platform is Built for Seamless Care Transitions
WellBeam’s platform sits between acute and post-acute providers, enabling clinical tasks, updates and authorizations to move electronically and in real time. Instead of relying on faxes, phone calls or fragmented portals, care teams can complete key workflows directly within their existing EMR. The company describes its technology as a “connected layer” that ties together historically siloed systems, ensuring that clinical information follows the patient as they move from hospitals to home health, hospice or specialty care providers.
This seamless exchange of data supports timely interventions, reduces administrative load and allows clinical teams to focus on care rather than chasing paperwork. By functioning entirely within the user’s EMR, WellBeam eliminates workflow disruption which is one of the biggest barriers to adoption in clinical environments.
Demonstrated Impact: Reduced Unplanned Care and Less Administrative Overhead
WellBeam reports significant results among its customers, which include large hospital systems, physician groups, independent medical networks and their post-acute partners. According to the company:
- Unplanned post-acute care is reduced by 25%
- Manual clinical workflows decrease by 75%
- Organizations generate new top-line revenue from improved care coordination
These outcomes reflect the “triple bottom line” healthcare leaders increasingly target: better patient outcomes, operational efficiency and stronger financial performance.
“The transition from a hospital or ambulatory care setting to home is a crucial stage in a patient’s care journey,” said Amee Devani, CEO and co-founder of WellBeam. “By accelerating network and data infrastructure connecting acute to post-acute provider networks, this investment unlocks a vast number of clinical use cases that rely on this seamless exchange of information and clinical data.” she added.

Why Is Interoperability Now a Strategic Priority ?
As hospitals operate under tighter margins and value-based care models expand, preventable readmissions and inefficient care transitions have become costly liabilities. Coordinating patient care without real-time data is increasingly untenable, particularly for large health systems with complex networks of post-acute partners.
“We’re proud to partner with forward-thinking companies like WellBeam that are building the critical infrastructure needed to connect care across settings,” said Brett Cook, partner at F-Prime.
WellBeam’s approach reflects a broader shift in healthcare technology: moving beyond isolated systems toward integrated, interoperable networks that support the full patient journey from hospital to home.
Funding Fueling the Next Phase of Growth of WellBeam
The Series A funding will be used to grow WellBeam’s engineering teams, expand its connectivity infrastructure and deepen EMR integrations across acute and post-acute environments. It will also support market expansion as more health systems adopt technology-led approaches to reducing readmissions and improving operational efficiency.
For WellBeam, the raise marks a critical moment in its mission to redefine care coordination. As the company scales, its platform aims to deliver a unified, real-time view of patient data across all care settings. A capability long recognized as essential but widely considered the missing link in modern healthcare delivery.
With demand rising for solutions that bridge clinical gaps, WellBeam is positioning itself as the interoperability partner of choice for organizations looking to modernize transitional care and enable connected clinical workflows.

