News 2/4/26
Top News

Tenet Healthcare regains full ownership of subsidiary Conifer Health Solutions by unwinding its joint venture with CommonSpirit Health.
Conifer will pay $540 million to redeem CommonSpirit’s 24% stake, while CommonSpirit will pay Tenet $1.9 billion over three years in exit obligations.
CommonSpirit will continue receiving RCM services from Conifer through the end of 2026, after which it plans to transition away from Conifer. Conifer has provided RCM services to CommonSpirit and and its predecessor organization, Catholic Health Initiatives, since 2012.
Tenet had considered spinning Conifer off in 2022 due to lackluster performance, but nixed the idea when business improved.
Reader Comments

From CallMeSuspicious: “Re: Epic ‘research’ posts. I was taken in initially until I started to see odd studies that added little to the knowledge base, and then veered off into questionable junk. A simple search on the named authors (when presented) reveals another carefully concealed attempt at Epic influence, given that they are all authored by Epic employees.” I’ll ask readers to weigh in: are studies that are performed by Epic-employed clinician-informaticists less trustworthy or valuable? Epic Research publications may sometimes support Epic-friendly narratives, especially when they involve Epic software, but the authors don’t try to conceal their connection to the company. Their studies could be construed as less rigorous because they are descriptive rather than hypothesis-based, are not peer reviewed, and incorporate any basis or limitations of using data sourced only from Epic customers, but they have the benefit of directly accessing timely, real-world data and seem free of publication lag time. Criticism is fair, but should focus on study methodology and design. It’s not like studies that are sponsored by drug or device companies, who directly profit from positive studies they sponsor.
From Cruel Winter: “Re: Wellsoft. It ranks high in Black Book and KLAS, but who is actually using it?” I passed your inquiry along to CareCloud’s media contact and will let you know what they say. Medsphere acquired Wellsoft in early 2019, then was itself acquired by CareCloud in August 2025. Wellsoft EDIS has performed well in KLAS reports for years, but I assume that hospital consolidation and single-vendor strategies may have reduced the pool of standalone ED software.
Sponsored Events and Resources
Live Webinar: February 18 (Wednesday) 2 ET. “From Blind Spots to Insights: Gaining Real-Time Visibility into Healthcare Risk.” Sponsor: CloudWave. Presenters: Jacob Wheeler, MBA, director of sales engineering, CloudWave; Mike Donahue, chief operating officer, CloudWave. Resilience starts with the ability to see clearly, across every endpoint, cloud workload, user, and clinical system. Join CloudWave’s cybersecurity leaders for an in-depth session on how real-time visibility transforms your ability to detect threats early, respond decisively, and strengthen resilience across the care ecosystem. Attendees will learn the practical steps that hospitals can take to move from reactive defense to resilient action.
Publication: HIStalk’s Guide to ViVE 2026 lists the activities of sponsors at the conference.
Contact Lorre to have your resource listed.
Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

Healthcare Growth Partners publishes its market review. Nuggets:
- Near-universal deployment of health IT mostly delivered the expected workflow and data capture benefits, but has done little to influence overall outcomes and cost.
- Technology investment mirrors the segment that the company addresses, either value-based care or consumer-directed health.
- Health IT deal activity rebounded strongly in 2025, while M&A valuation has settled above pre-pandemic levels.
- Divestitures as a percentage of M&A and buyout deals have doubled, as companies realign portfolios that were less focused during COVID-related expansion.
- AI is not a valuation driver of most deals, but creates value when its use improves company fundamentals.
- HGP summarizes the public market as, “While investors have been eager for the IPO floodgates to reopen, the Health IT market appears to be operating in a longer transition phase. The gates are not shut, but they remain narrow. Timelines continue to extend as late-stage private companies opt to remain on the sidelines, activity remains highly selective, and volumes are muted relative to historical peaks. Confidence, while improving, remains fragile and closely tied to broader macroeconomic conditions and public market stability.”
Sales
- Jefferson Health (PA) selects Qualified Health’s AI operations platform.
People

Balajee Sethuraman, MBA (Emids) joins Acentra Health as EVP and chief business services officer.

Viz.ai names Tim Showalter, MD, MPH, MBA (ArteraAI) as its first chief medical officer.

Pieces Technologies founder and former CEO Ruben Amarasingham, MD, MBA joins Smarter Technologies as chief medical officer. Smarter Technologies acquired Pieces last October.

MedeAnalytics appoints Chris Lance, MBA (Avalon Healthcare Solutions) chief product officer.
Announcements and Implementations

Group Health Cooperative of South Central Wisconsin implements Epic’s new AI charting tool, which was first previewed last August at Epic UGM.
Penn Medicine transitions 63 practices to its Penn Medicine OnDemand virtual care service for after-hours and weekend care, eliminating the need for primary care physicians to be on call during those times.

AdventHealth Castle Rock (CO) launches virtual admit nursing using technology from Hellocare.
InterSystems launches Payer Connector, which helps health plans integrate Epic Player Platform with their applications.
NYU Langone offers patients access to Isaac Health’s virtual specialty clinics for brain health and dementia through its neurology program.
MSU Health Care replaces its Athenahealth system with Henry Ford Health’s Epic software as part of a broader, 30-year partnership launched in 2021.
UCI Health implements GW RhythmX’s Get Well Stay patient engagement technology at its new hospital in Irvine, CA.

South Central Regional Medical Center (MS) goes live on Epic.
Oracle Health adds order creation capabilities to its clinical AI agent, which extends the note generation functionality of ambient listening to draft orders for labs, imaging, prescriptions, and appointments.
Government and Politics
VA Secretary Doug Collins again reassures lawmakers that the department is ready to resume implementing its new Oracle Health-based EHR at several sites in Michigan in April. Collins downplayed the spate of concerns and unaddressed recommendations listed in the VA Office of Inspector General’s latest report, noting that the recommendations “were based on a screwed up, backwards system that is not in place anymore. … anything in reference to the OIG report, in all fairness, is like looking at a 1945 novel.”
President Trump signs an appropriations bill that includes a two-year extension of Medicare telehealth flexibilities and a five-year extension of the Medicare Acute Hospital Care at Home waiver.
Other

The Sequoia Project releases “Simplifying Data Access for Better Patient Experience: Best Practices and Implementation Toolkit for Providers,” a draft set of best practices for improving patient access to health data. Feedback is welcome through April 2.

In Canada, nurses express frustration related to the December 2025 go-live of Oracle Cerner Canada at Nova Scotia’s IWK Health Centre. The president of the nurses’ union says that “there’s just so many problems that it’s like putting your finger in a dam” as solving one issue creates another. Project leaders identify the main problems as routing, ambulatory care workflows, and ambulatory care waitlist management, also noting that concerns exist about the system’s overall stability. IWK is the first go-live of a planned province-wide rollout of the $270 million system.
Cedars-Sinai’s Postpartum Hypertension Program sees encouraging levels of patient engagement, with 500 women enrolled in the program, which enables them to conduct and record blood pressure readings at home through a dedicated patient portal that is connected to their EHR. Nearly 75% of enrollees scheduled a follow-up physician visit within six months of giving birth, while 83% did so within 12 months.
Sponsor Updates
- Black Book Research establishes a comprehensive framework to safeguard survey, polling, and satisfaction-based research against emerging risks accelerated by generative AI while using AI responsibly to improve research operations.
- CereCore publishes a new case study titled “Mary Rutan Health: Valuable Focus and Confidence Restored with Knowledgeable IT Help Desk.”
- Agfa HealthCare offers a new guide titled “Implementing Enterprise Imaging in the Cloud: 5 Strategic Considerations for a Successful Implementation.”
- Shenandoah Medical Center will implement Altera Digital Health’s Sunrise Axon for data exchange.
- Arcadia publishes a new e-book, “The Art of AI: Blending Innovation with Know-How in Healthcare.”
Blog Posts
- Redefining Patient Access: The Strategic Power of Centralization in Healthcare (AGS Health)
- How Healthcare Revenue Cycle Analytics Can Improve Financial Performance (FinThrive)
- Top 5 Healthcare IT Trends Shaping 2026 (Med Tech Solutions)
- Cyber Risk in Healthcare Is Entering a New Phase (Clearwater)
- The AdvancedMD 2026 CPT/HCPCS Codebook: Everything You Need for an Efficient, Error-Free Medical Billing Strategy (AdvancedMD)
- Giving provider satisfaction a dose of GenAI (Altera Digital Health)
- An Investor’s View on Artera: Q&A with Avery Rosin at Lead Edge Capital (Artera)
- Aligning Security Investment with Clinical Outcomes: The Strategic Role of Managed SOC and CISO Office as Service (CTG)
- DrFirst Mourns the Loss of Thomas E. Sullivan, M.D. (DrFirst)
Contacts
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This is a great point—many discussions about patient wait times still focus on staffing or technology, while the real issue…