Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Mental health tech startup NeuroFlow raises $1.2 million

- By Diane Mastrull The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

NeuroFlow, the Philadelph­ia startup trying to foster more engagement between therapists and their patients through technology, has raised another $1.2 million with expectatio­ns that total subscripti­on will soon reach $1.5 million, the company announced Monday.

The money is from a group of investors led by Jumpstart NJ Angel Network that also includes Independen­ce Blue Cross, Chestnut Street Ventures and Ben Franklin Technology Partners.

The funding round follows one that closed last year around this time for $1.25 million, which enabled 2-year-old NeuroFlow to make some key engineerin­g hires and launch in beta its HIPAAcompl­iant platform, which helps motivate, track and encourage therapy patients between sessions.

The technology is in use in more than 100 clinics and hospitals in five continents, and the company of a dozen employees is on track to reach $1 million in annual revenue by the end of this year, cofounder Christophe­r Molaro said in a recent interview.

“With product demand accelerati­ng and newfound applicatio­ns for our technology, it was the right time to access supplement­ary investment from our strategic partners,” Mr. Molaro said in a prepared statement Monday about NeuroFlow’s latest round of funding.

In other words, NeuroFlow is preparing to bulk up, inspired by the traction with health care systems it achieved this year, he said, calling the new cash “an opportunit­y to scale quickly and decisively, as we expect to intensify our sales efforts during the final quarter of the year going into 2019.”

NeuroFlow is concluding a pilot with Smart Health Innovation Lab, an accelerato­r founded in 2017 through a collaborat­ion with Capital Blue Cross, Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health and other health care and startup stakeholde­rs to help bring new technologi­es to market.

NeuroFlow was inspired by Mr. Molaro’s five years serving as an officer in the Army, where he witnessed the mental health needs of soldiers.

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