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Quilt Health Raises $6M Seed Round to Build the Future of Family-Centered Primary Care

Quilt Health, a healthcare startup redesigning primary care for modern families, has raised $6 million in Seed funding to scale its full-stack care model focused on accessibility, empathy, and relational healthcare. The round was led by MaC Venture Capital, Underscore VC, Meridian Street Capital, and BoxGroup, with additional backing from Watershed VC and Coalition Operators.

Co-founded by Andy Ellner, MD and Jazmine Coleman, Quilt Health is building a care experience that treats the family - not just the individual - as the unit of care. Its hybrid model blends digital tools, high-touch clinical teams, and community-aligned services to deliver continuous, compassionate care from childhood to eldercare.

At a time when trust in the healthcare system is low and caregiver needs are overlooked, Quilt Health aims to provide care that is as human as it is efficient.


What Quilt Health Does

Quilt Health delivers family-centered primary care through a hybrid model that combines virtual visits, in-home care, and neighborhood-based clinics. It’s designed for families juggling work, caregiving, and chronic health needs - especially those often underserved by legacy systems.

Key features include:

Quilt doesn’t think of patients in isolation - it treats families as dynamic care networks. Whether it's a single mother managing a child’s asthma and her own hypertension, or a caregiver juggling the health of aging parents, Quilt builds continuity around real life.

Where traditional care models are fragmented and transactional, Quilt is betting on a unified, relationship-based approach that prioritizes trust, empathy, and responsiveness.


Why It Matters

The U.S. healthcare system remains deeply siloed and reactive - especially for families navigating multiple conditions, providers, and life stages. Most primary care practices are designed for individual visits, not family health journeys. That leaves gaps in care continuity, communication, and cultural relevance.

Quilt Health is bridging that gap by offering a care model that’s designed to flex around real-world demands. This approach could:

And here's a sharp insight founders often miss: if your delivery model requires behavior change before delivering value, you're already at a disadvantage. Quilt is avoiding that trap. Instead of demanding that patients, payers, or clinicians adopt new mental models, it slots directly into how families already make decisions - under stress, across generations, and in real time.

The highest-leverage startups don’t change human behavior first; they scaffold around it. Quilt is built for ambient adoption - its model wraps around the chaos, rather than trying to tidy it. That’s the design unlock: deliver enough structure to create trust, but not so much that it breaks real-world fluidity. If your platform requires choreography, it’s not ready for the front lines of care.

And it maps directly to existing reimbursement models. Quilt’s services align with value-based care incentives, employer health benefits, and Medicaid innovation programs. This isn’t healthcare disruption from the outside - it’s reinvention from within.

Too often, startups mistake technical innovation for clinical transformation. Quilt Health flips that dynamic: the technology supports the human relationship, not the other way around. Its infrastructure enables relational care at scale - not just better scheduling or digital forms.

That’s what makes Quilt more than a clinic with an app. It’s a reimagining of what the care team should be - and how trust is built.


The Market Opportunity: Families as the New Frontier of Care Delivery

The structural need for relational, family-oriented care is growing fast - and the market is catching up.

And while digital health funding has cooled from pandemic highs, capital is still flowing into mission-critical infrastructure - especially models that merge tech, equity, and value-based care delivery.

Yet most innovation continues to target individuals, not caregiving systems. Quilt Health addresses this overlooked layer - redefining care delivery for the complex, interconnected realities families actually live in.

Its hybrid model doesn’t aim to replace traditional providers - it augments the system where it’s weakest: consistency, coordination, and cultural responsiveness.


What’s Next for Quilt Health?

With its $6M seed round, Quilt Health plans to:

Quilt’s long-term vision is bold: to become the default care platform for families - whether urban, rural, or underserved. In a system built for individual billing codes, Quilt is building for human connection.

As care delivery shifts toward trust, continuity, and relational infrastructure, Quilt Health is leading the way.


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