Leading healthcare organizations choose Phreesia to revolutionize their point of service. Regardless of size, specialty or demographics, today’s healthcare systems face the same challenges: escalating demands, rising costs and increasing patient responsibility. Phreesia’s innovative point-of-service platform—including patient self-service and mobile applications—resolves these issues by driving efficiency and profitability throughout your organization. Your patients expect a seamless, automated experience from other industries. Why should your front office be any different?
Location: United States, North Carolina, Raleigh
Employees: 1001-5000
Phone: +1 888-654-7473
Total raised: $17M
Founded date: 2005
Investors 1
| Date | Name | Website |
| - | Healthbox | healthbox.... |
Funding Rounds 1
| Date | Series | Amount | Investors |
| 08.11.2017 | - | $17M | - |
Mentions in press and media 4
| Date | Title | Description |
| 17.10.2016 | MedCity announces winners of patient engagement startup contest | And the results are in. We received 60 submissions, out of which a handful was disqualified for not fulfilling contest criteria. MedCity’s editorial team selected 15 finalists and published them online for a reader vote. While the readers w... |
| 20.01.2014 | In Merck patient adherence throw down, 5 teams reimagine care plans for diabetes, heart disease patients | Frame Health: In a response to the conundrum of how to develop an effective way to help a diverse group of people who share a disease, Frame Health tapped a personality characteristic database to create patient adherence profiles. The platf... |
| - | MedCity announces winners of patient engagement startup contest | Patient engagement is key to get patients involved in their own health and is the cornerstone for some of the behavior change that is necessary to move the needle in healthcare. As such, not only is it a topic of immense importance (MedCity... |
| - | In Merck patient adherence throw down, 5 teams reimagine care plans for diabetes, heart disease patients | One of the biggest challenges to improving care for patients with diabetes and heart disease is figuring out the best tools for those patients. The problem is, there’s no such thing as a typical patient. Things like co-morbidities, support ... |