Foundation Health is building the connective tissue for modern pharmacy operations, replacing the fax-and-phone busywork that slows medication access with an AI-native platform that automates the hardest parts of the prescription journey. Its flagship intelligence layer, an AI pharmacist assistant called PAIGE, orchestrates prior authorization, refill authorization through collaborative practice agreements, specialty-pharmacy routing, and patient outreach over SMS and voice. The result is a system the company says delivers roughly 50% time savings on prior authorizations, fewer denials, and faster time on therapy for patients waiting on critical medications.
The company was founded by Sid Viswanathan, who previously co-founded pharmacy infrastructure company Truepill, and the team has built Foundation Health around deep integrations with the systems pharmacies already run. The platform connects to major electronic health records such as Epic, plugs into pharmacy and specialty workflows, and offers a white-labeled, patient-facing digital pharmacy experience that health systems and consumer health brands can deploy under their own name.
Foundation Health serves a broad set of customers across the pharmacy value chain: health systems looking to reduce administrative burden, pharmaceutical manufacturers building direct-to-patient programs, health plans, and developers who need a healthcare API. Additional capabilities include financial-assistance program identification and enrollment, 340B compliance and revenue optimization, and MSOT queue automation for specialty routing.
In its Series A, Foundation Health raised $20 million led by Define Ventures, with participation from Vanderbilt University, Intermountain Ventures, and existing investors. Named health-system partners and design customers include Intermountain Health and Hackensack Meridian Health. The company maintains HIPAA compliance, SOC 2 Type 2 certification, and LegitScript approval, positioning it as enterprise-ready infrastructure for pharmacy automation rather than a point tool.