NeuroFlow Acquires Quartet as Behavioral Health Consolidation Heats Up

It turns out that Quartet offloading its psychiatry business last week was only half of the story, and NeuroFlow will be writing the next chapter after acquiring the rest of the value-based behavioral care enabler.

Quartet works with health plans, health systems, and community centers to connect patients with behavioral care needs directly to high-quality providers, including its own medical group.

  • Just last week, it sent 165 of those providers to Iris Telehealth through the acquisition of its innovaTel psychiatry division, which specializes in difficult to manage conditions.
  • It wasn’t exactly clear why Quartet felt it was the right time for an exit, or why it split up the business, but it’s apparently been looking for mission-aligned partners to help expand its impact.

NeuroFlow checks all the boxes. The NeuroFlow platform centers around integrating behavioral health into physical health workflows, eliminating a major blindspot for physicians looking to improve overall outcomes – not to mention quality and risk management programs.

  • Since launching in 2016, NeuroFlow’s raised $58M of total funding (versus a hefty $266M for Quartet), and it hasn’t shied away from adding new capabilities through M&A.
  • It picked up measurement-based care company Owl in 2024, and it’s fresh off the acquisition of Intermountain’s behavioral health risk analytics model earlier this month.

It’s hard for healthcare organizations to manage the quality, outcomes, and cost of their patients’ care without managing behavioral health. NeuroFlow makes that happen at scale.

  • It handles everything from the identification, triage, and measurement of that care, while also equipping patients with self-guided programs that allow providers to track their progress and update their risk levels.
  • Quartet’s expansive provider network and referral management expertise will bolster NeuroFlow’s offerings for its existing customers, and bring along new ones like PA-based Independence Blue Cross, which was specifically called out in the release.

The Takeaway

There’s unfortunately no shortage of demand for behavioral health services, and many expect a new wave of consolidation to be driven by companies pooling resources to build platforms that can keep up. That wave could already be here, with NeuroFlow’s acquisition of Quartet adding to back-to-back busy weeks in the segment.

NeuroFlow Picks Up Steam With New Growth Funding

When looking at the movers and shakers in the behavioral health arena, it’s hard not to include NeuroFlow in that conversation – especially after last week’s funding boost courtesy of Concord Health Partners.

The press release definitely leaned into the “unlabeled round” theme, offering neither a Series title nor a dollar value, although it did tag the funding for growing NeuroFlow “to match the increase in demand for its solutions” among health systems, payors, and government agencies.

NeuroFlow had previously raised a total of $57.8M, capital that was used to build out an AI-driven analytics platform that helps providers consistently screen for behavioral health issues, triage patients to appropriate care, and engage them between visits.

  • That platform enables NeuroFlow’s partners to overcome the usual hurdles to adopting an integrated behavioral health model, reducing the risks associated with undiagnosed conditions and helping them get out in front of potential issues before they escalate. 
  • The data collected through that process is then served to providers within their established workflows in the form of decision support, creating a nice feedback loop with the platform’s engagement component while helping create high-touch care journeys.

NeuroFlow’s story over the past year has been about partnership momentum, with a string of new names on the roster like Novant Health, Atlantic Health System, and Emory Healthcare.

  • Growth acquisitions also found a place in NeuroFlow’s playbook, and it recently picked up Capital Solution Design (Behavioral Health Lab) to expand its reach within the VA while gaining some valuable VA-specific EHR integration expertise.
  • The mission behind NeuroFlow is to make mental health a bigger part of physical health, and the latest investment will push that pursuit forward by funding new platform capabilities and quite possibly more strategic M&A.

The Takeaway

The behavioral health segment continues to remind us that it’s one of the most resilient corners of the digital health market, and NeuroFlow’s raise is the latest proof point that these startups can keep securing capital in an otherwise gloomy funding environment. NeuroFlow isn’t offering teletherapy and it’s not delivering care, but it seems to be carving out a nice niche with its “picks and shovels” approach to bridging gaps in the treatment journey for those that are.

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