News
Acquisition trail for maternal telemedicine giant Ouma Health

Ouma Health, a US-based telemedicine firm specialising in maternal-fetal medicine (MFM), has acquired Sunny Day MFM and certain clinical assets of Boston MFM.
The acquisition integrates four new in-person locations across Florida, Massachusetts, and Maine – to expand Ouma’s care model from exclusively telemedicine to hybrid care models.
“Since inception, our mission has been simple, to ensure every mother has access to expert care, wherever they are,” said Sina Haeri, CEO of Ouma Health.
“By building on our foundation as the nation’s premier teleMFM platform and expanding into hybrid care, we are creating a new standard of access and quality. This acquisition allows us to bring the best of both virtual and in-person care to communities that need it most.”
Bruce Cohen, CEO of Sunny Day MFM and Boston MFM, will continue in a key role within the integrated organisation.
He said: “Sunny Day MFM and Boston MFM were founded on the principle of providing compassionate, expert care.
“Joining forces with Ouma allows us to scale that vision nationally while ensuring patients across diverse communities get the specialized support they deserve.”
Founded in 2019, Ouma Health has emerged as the leading maternity-focused telemedicine solution for some of the nation’s largest health systems.
It operates nearly 60 telemedicine sites supporting provider groups and health systems nationwide.
Ouma also partners directly with payors in several markets to deliver tailored programs in MFM, midwifery, behavioral health, addiction medicine, and lactation to their members state-wide. Beyond its clinical partnerships, Ouma is also the trusted choice for nearly 100 agencies across the country in meeting third-party reproduction needs.
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Being female not a universal stroke risk factor for patients with AF, study finds

Female sex may not raise stroke risk across all atrial fibrillation (AF) patients, with higher risk mainly seen in women aged 75 and older, a study suggests.
Researchers said stroke prevention for women with the condition should be more personalised, especially for patients under 75.
Dr Amitabh C Pandey, director of cardiovascular translational research at Tulane University School of Medicine, said: “For years, female sex has been included as a risk factor along with other factors such as high blood pressure and diabetes, meaning women were more likely to be prescribed anticoagulants.
“Our study shows younger women may not have as much added stroke risk as previously thought, while older women, particularly those over 75, appear to have a higher risk that deserves close attention.”
The new Tulane University study challenges a long-standing assumption in heart care that being female automatically increases stroke risk for patients with atrial fibrillation.
Atrial fibrillation, often called AF, is a common heart rhythm disorder that causes the heart to beat irregularly.
It is associated with a higher risk of stroke and is often treated with anticoagulants, also known as blood thinners.
The study found that stroke risk did not increase equally across all female patients with AF.
Instead, researchers said being female may act more as a risk modifier, with increased stroke risk seen primarily among women aged 75 and older or those with a greater burden of other health conditions.
Clinicians often use a scoring system to decide whether people with AF should be prescribed blood thinners.
The system gives points for factors including age, heart failure, diabetes, previous stroke, vascular disease and high blood pressure.
Women also receive one point for sex alone.
Researchers said this can mean women with AF become eligible for blood thinners earlier or more often than men with otherwise similar risk profiles.
While blood thinners can help prevent clot-related strokes, they can also increase the risk of bruising, prolonged bleeding, gastrointestinal bleeding and other serious complications.
The researchers analysed approximately 950,000 patients with AF using TriNetX, a large anonymised electronic health record database.
They compared stroke outcomes between male and female patients across three age groups: younger than 65, 65 to 74, and 75 and older.
Male and female patients were matched based on age, other health problems and whether they had been prescribed anticoagulation medicine.
Among patients younger than 75, the study found no significant difference in one-year stroke risk between men and women.
However, among patients aged 75 and older, women had a modest but statistically significant increase in stroke risk compared with men.
In patients aged 75 and older with no additional risk factors beyond age, women had about one additional stroke per 629 patients compared with their male counterparts.
The findings support growing interest in a newer AF risk score, known as CHA2DS2-VA, which removes sex as a standalone risk factor.
However, researchers said more studies are needed and medical guidance remains inconsistent.
Han Feng, assistant professor at Tulane University School of Medicine, said: “This general approach came from women being underrepresented in AFib trials and studies comprising only about one-third of study populations.
“Our study shows not all women with AFib have the same risk profile, and these decisions should be individualised.
Pandey said: “These findings highlight the need for modern tools and approaches that can personalise risk profiles to individuals.
“The goal is not to undertreat patients who need stroke prevention, but to better identify who is most likely to benefit from anticoagulation and who may be exposed to unnecessary risk.”
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