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Enli Health Intelligence

Enli Health Intelligence was a privately held software company based in Beaverton, Oregon, and previously in Hillsboro, Oregon. Founded in 2001 as Kryptiq Corporation, the company specialized in electronic medical records and secure communications between physicians and patients. The 125-employee company was purchased by Surescripts in 2012, which was a previous investor in the company. Annual revenues at the time of the sale were approximately $25 million. In January 2015, the company announced that it was splitting from Surescripts and becoming independent again.[1] Later in 2015, it was renamed Enli Health Intelligence. In 2021, it was acquired by Cedar Gate Technologies, which discontinued use of the Enli name.

Enli Health Intelligence
Final headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon, pictured in 2019
Company typePrivate
IndustrySoftware
Founded2001
Defunct2021
FateAcquired by Cedar Gate Technologies
HeadquartersBeaverton, Oregon, USA
45°31′53″N 122°50′53″W / 45.531261°N 122.8481°W / 45.531261; -122.8481
Key people
CEO, Luis Machuca
ProductsSecure messaging
Revenue~$25 million (2011)
Number of employees
125 (2012)

History edit

Kryptiq Corporation was founded in 2001 by Luis Machuca, Jeff Sponaugle, and Murali Karamchedu,[2] with the company first housed in Machuca's home.[3] Kryptiq opened its first office in Beaverton, Oregon, in October 2001 after securing $2 million in capital.[4] Kryptiq was founded largely by former employees of Intel Corporation as well as those from eFusion looking to use their encryption experience and expertise to provide secure email for the health care field.[4]

By September 2002, the company had grown to 15 employees and had a board of directors heavy on those with Intel ties, such as Andy Bryant.[4] The company's original production was a subscription-based email add-on that allowed physicians to securely communicate with patients and others and data protected by HIPAA.[4] In July 2003, the company purchased software company RosettaMed, with plans to incorporate their software into Kryptiq's existing programs.[5] In August of that year, Kryptiq finished raising $7.9 million in venture capital from investors such as Voyager Capital and SmartForest Ventures.[6] The company continued with acquisitions in November when it purchased MedShape LLC, allowing Kryptiq to expand into the medical records field.[7] Kryptiq retained all six employees who had developed DocuTrak and RosettaStone.[7] By December 2003, the company had grown to 50 employees and projected to be cash flow positive by the end of 2004.[2]

 
Former headquarters at the Rock Creek Corporate Center

Kryptiq launched CareManager in 2004, a disease management software program.[8] CareManager was developed with Providence Health System, and the program was awarded the e-Health Leadership Award in 2004 by the Disease Management Association of America.[8] Then in January 2004, Kryptiq acquired This Computer Solution Inc. in an all-stock deal.[9] The Vancouver, Washington, company had developed software for managing contracts for health insurers.[9] In January 2005, the company moved from Beaverton to Hillsboro and finished the prior year with 200% growth.[10] By February of that year, Kryptiq had expanded to 60 employees, become a member of the Center for Health Transformation, and added GE Healthcare as a partner.[10]

The company raised $7.1 million in capital in 2005, with investors including SmartForest Ventures, Voyager Capital, and Shelter Capital Partners, with the round closing in April.[11] At the time, Kryptiq was then 65 percent owned by investors.[11] In July 2005, the company announced they would move from the AmberGlen Business Center to a 24,000-square-foot (2,200 m2) space in the Rock Creek Corporate Center along U.S. 26, both in Hillsboro.[12] Shelter Capital Partners, SmartForest Ventures, the Oregon Investment Fund, and others invested another combined $6.6 million in Kryptiq in September 2006.[13]

 
Company headquarters from 2010 to mid-2016

In March 2007, Kryptiq licensed their Choreo medical records system to The Regence Group in an effort to further penetrate the BlueCross and BlueShield marketplace,[14] with implementation starting in June 2007.[15] Microsoft teamed up with Kryptiq later in 2007 to launch HealthVault, a Microsoft product the later was using to enter the consumer healthcare market.[16] The company sold off its software division that focused on health plan management to Porticio Systems in April 2009.[17] In August 2008, the company bought Secure Network Solutions.[18]

The company announced in June 2010 they would move to the AmberGlen business park[19] into a 22,721-square-foot (2,110.8 m2) space.[20] In October 2010, Surescripts invested in Kryptiq and signed-on to use Kryptiq's secure technology in Surescripts’ products.[21] At the time, Kryptiq had climbed to 90 employees,[21] and the next month secured an $8 million investment related to the Surescripts deal.[22] Growth from the Surescripts deal led to an increase of employees to 120 and a need to add 6,000 square feet (560 m2) of office space.[3]

Surescripts acquired all of Kryptiq in August 2012, which exercised such an option from the prior deal that brought Surescripts in with a 21% ownership stake.[23][24] At the time of the purchase, Kryptiq had revenues of about $25 million annually and 125 employees.[24]

In January 2015, the company announced that it was splitting from Surescripts and becoming independent again.[1] The company changed its name to Enli Health Intelligence in September 2015.[25] In August 2016, Enli was still headquartered on Amberglen Parkway,[26] in eastern Hillsboro, but by October 2016 it had relocated its corporate headquarters to NW 167th Avenue, in northern Beaverton[27] (a little more than one mile to the east).

In January 2021, Enli was acquired by Cedar Gate Technologies, based in Connecticut.[28][29] For an unknown period, the new owner retained the Enli name and referred to it as "a Cedar Gate company",[30] but later in 2021 all references to Enli, other than historical references, were removed from Cedar Gate's website.[citation needed]

Products edit

Kryptiq licensed a variety of healthcare related software to both healthcare providers and health insurers.[31] These products included CareManager, DocuSign for Patients, Secure Messaging, Automated Clinical Messaging, Patient Portal, ePrescribing, and others that provided services such as document management.[31] The Secure Messaging program was the backbone of the network utilized by parent company Surescripts,[31] which was used by doctors to share patient records and information electronically.[3] Kryptiq's Patient Portal allowed providers to accept payments from patients over the internet, which totaled almost $10 million in 2011.[3] Customers included Providence Health System, MeritCare Health System, GE Healthcare, and MedStar Health, among others.[31]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Rogoway, Mike (January 30, 2015). "Kryptiq, sold in 2012, will be independent again after spinning out from Surescripts". The Oregonian. Retrieved 2015-01-31.
  2. ^ a b Moody, Robin J. (December 28, 2003). "Kryptiq ready to expand its market reach in 2004". Portland Business Journal.
  3. ^ a b c d Siemers, Erik (April 13, 2012). "Kryptiq finds acceptance". Portland Business Journal.
  4. ^ a b c d Raths, David (February 6, 2005). "Kryptiq team encrypts e-mail for medical uses". Portland Business Journal.
  5. ^ "Kryptiq buys Houston company". Portland Business Journal. July 22, 2003.
  6. ^ "Venture round nets Kryptiq $7.9M". Portland Business Journal. August 29, 2003.
  7. ^ a b Moody, Robin J. (November 10, 2003). "Kryptiq buys Utah-based MedShape". Portland Business Journal.
  8. ^ a b Moody, Robin J. (February 24, 2005). "Kryptiq rolls out disease management application". Portland Business Journal.
  9. ^ a b Moody, Robin J. (January 19, 2004). "Kryptiq buys Vancouver software company". Portland Business Journal.
  10. ^ a b Moody, Robin J. (February 6, 2005). "A Kryptiq answer". Portland Business Journal.
  11. ^ a b "Kryptiq raises $7.1M". Portland Business Journal. April 26, 2005.
  12. ^ Culverwell, Wendy (July 31, 2005). "New Sunset on horizon". Portland Business Journal.
  13. ^ "State invests in Kryptiq Corp". Portland Business Journal. September 14, 2006.
  14. ^ Moody, Robin J. (March 4, 2007). "Kryptiq strengthens Blue Cross technology ties". Portland Business Journal.
  15. ^ O'Donnell, Anthony (April 1, 2008). "Kryptiq's Choreo Powers Regence's Contract Management Across the Enterprise". Insurance & Technology. UBM Tech.
  16. ^ Rojas-Burke, Joe (October 4, 2007). "Microsoft picks Hillsboro's Kryptiq for health records project". The Oregonian.
  17. ^
    • "Kryptiq sells division to Portico Systems". Portland Business Journal. April 21, 2009.
    • O'Donnell, Anthony (April 22, 2009). "Portico Acquires Kryptiq's Choreo Health Plan Business". Insurance & Technology. UBM Tech.
  18. ^ "Kryptiq buys Secure Network Solutions". Portland Business Journal. August 19, 2008.
  19. ^ Rogoway, Mike (June 15, 2010). "Kryptiq sets move as it adds employees". The Oregonian.
  20. ^ Culverwell, Wendy (February 28, 2010). "Kryptiq leases Amberglen space for new headquarters". Portland Business Journal.
  21. ^ a b Rogoway, Mike (October 25, 2010). "Kryptiq takes on new investor, partnership as it targets growth". The Oregonian.
  22. ^ "Kryptiq Corp. discloses $8M investment". Portland Business Journal. November 26, 2010.
  23. ^ Siemers, Erik (August 31, 2012). "Hillsboro's Kryptiq acquired by Surescripts". Portland Business Journal.
  24. ^ a b Rogoway, Mike (August 31, 2012). "Kryptiq sells business to Surescripts, will stay in Hillsboro". The Oregonian.
  25. ^ "Company Overview of Enli Health Intelligence". Health Care Technology. Bloomberg Business. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  26. ^ . Enli Health Intelligence. Archived from the original on August 5, 2016. Retrieved October 27, 2016.
  27. ^ . Enli Health Intelligence. Archived from the original on October 27, 2016. Retrieved October 27, 2016.
  28. ^ Hayes, Elizabeth (January 5, 2021). "Portland-area health care technology provider sold to Connecticut company". Portland Business Journal. Retrieved December 26, 2021.
  29. ^ "Cedar Gate Technologies Acquires Enli Health Intelligence" (Press release). Cedar Gate Technologies. January 5, 2021. Retrieved December 26, 2021.
  30. ^ . Cedar Gate Technologies. Archived from the original on March 8, 2021. Retrieved December 26, 2021. Enli is now part of Cedar Gate Technologies{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  31. ^ a b c d "About". Kryptiq. Retrieved December 12, 2012.

enli, health, intelligence, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, improve, removing, promotional, content, inappropriate, external, links, adding, encyclopedic, content, written, from, neutral, point, view, october. This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Enli Health Intelligence was a privately held software company based in Beaverton Oregon and previously in Hillsboro Oregon Founded in 2001 as Kryptiq Corporation the company specialized in electronic medical records and secure communications between physicians and patients The 125 employee company was purchased by Surescripts in 2012 which was a previous investor in the company Annual revenues at the time of the sale were approximately 25 million In January 2015 the company announced that it was splitting from Surescripts and becoming independent again 1 Later in 2015 it was renamed Enli Health Intelligence In 2021 it was acquired by Cedar Gate Technologies which discontinued use of the Enli name Enli Health IntelligenceFinal headquarters in Beaverton Oregon pictured in 2019Company typePrivateIndustrySoftwareFounded2001Defunct2021FateAcquired by Cedar Gate TechnologiesHeadquartersBeaverton Oregon USA45 31 53 N 122 50 53 W 45 531261 N 122 8481 W 45 531261 122 8481Key peopleCEO Luis MachucaProductsSecure messagingRevenue 25 million 2011 Number of employees125 2012 History editKryptiq Corporation was founded in 2001 by Luis Machuca Jeff Sponaugle and Murali Karamchedu 2 with the company first housed in Machuca s home 3 Kryptiq opened its first office in Beaverton Oregon in October 2001 after securing 2 million in capital 4 Kryptiq was founded largely by former employees of Intel Corporation as well as those from eFusion looking to use their encryption experience and expertise to provide secure email for the health care field 4 By September 2002 the company had grown to 15 employees and had a board of directors heavy on those with Intel ties such as Andy Bryant 4 The company s original production was a subscription based email add on that allowed physicians to securely communicate with patients and others and data protected by HIPAA 4 In July 2003 the company purchased software company RosettaMed with plans to incorporate their software into Kryptiq s existing programs 5 In August of that year Kryptiq finished raising 7 9 million in venture capital from investors such as Voyager Capital and SmartForest Ventures 6 The company continued with acquisitions in November when it purchased MedShape LLC allowing Kryptiq to expand into the medical records field 7 Kryptiq retained all six employees who had developed DocuTrak and RosettaStone 7 By December 2003 the company had grown to 50 employees and projected to be cash flow positive by the end of 2004 2 nbsp Former headquarters at the Rock Creek Corporate Center Kryptiq launched CareManager in 2004 a disease management software program 8 CareManager was developed with Providence Health System and the program was awarded the e Health Leadership Award in 2004 by the Disease Management Association of America 8 Then in January 2004 Kryptiq acquired This Computer Solution Inc in an all stock deal 9 The Vancouver Washington company had developed software for managing contracts for health insurers 9 In January 2005 the company moved from Beaverton to Hillsboro and finished the prior year with 200 growth 10 By February of that year Kryptiq had expanded to 60 employees become a member of the Center for Health Transformation and added GE Healthcare as a partner 10 The company raised 7 1 million in capital in 2005 with investors including SmartForest Ventures Voyager Capital and Shelter Capital Partners with the round closing in April 11 At the time Kryptiq was then 65 percent owned by investors 11 In July 2005 the company announced they would move from the AmberGlen Business Center to a 24 000 square foot 2 200 m2 space in the Rock Creek Corporate Center along U S 26 both in Hillsboro 12 Shelter Capital Partners SmartForest Ventures the Oregon Investment Fund and others invested another combined 6 6 million in Kryptiq in September 2006 13 nbsp Company headquarters from 2010 to mid 2016 In March 2007 Kryptiq licensed their Choreo medical records system to The Regence Group in an effort to further penetrate the BlueCross and BlueShield marketplace 14 with implementation starting in June 2007 15 Microsoft teamed up with Kryptiq later in 2007 to launch HealthVault a Microsoft product the later was using to enter the consumer healthcare market 16 The company sold off its software division that focused on health plan management to Porticio Systems in April 2009 17 In August 2008 the company bought Secure Network Solutions 18 The company announced in June 2010 they would move to the AmberGlen business park 19 into a 22 721 square foot 2 110 8 m2 space 20 In October 2010 Surescripts invested in Kryptiq and signed on to use Kryptiq s secure technology in Surescripts products 21 At the time Kryptiq had climbed to 90 employees 21 and the next month secured an 8 million investment related to the Surescripts deal 22 Growth from the Surescripts deal led to an increase of employees to 120 and a need to add 6 000 square feet 560 m2 of office space 3 Surescripts acquired all of Kryptiq in August 2012 which exercised such an option from the prior deal that brought Surescripts in with a 21 ownership stake 23 24 At the time of the purchase Kryptiq had revenues of about 25 million annually and 125 employees 24 In January 2015 the company announced that it was splitting from Surescripts and becoming independent again 1 The company changed its name to Enli Health Intelligence in September 2015 25 In August 2016 Enli was still headquartered on Amberglen Parkway 26 in eastern Hillsboro but by October 2016 it had relocated its corporate headquarters to NW 167th Avenue in northern Beaverton 27 a little more than one mile to the east In January 2021 Enli was acquired by Cedar Gate Technologies based in Connecticut 28 29 For an unknown period the new owner retained the Enli name and referred to it as a Cedar Gate company 30 but later in 2021 all references to Enli other than historical references were removed from Cedar Gate s website citation needed Products editKryptiq licensed a variety of healthcare related software to both healthcare providers and health insurers 31 These products included CareManager DocuSign for Patients Secure Messaging Automated Clinical Messaging Patient Portal ePrescribing and others that provided services such as document management 31 The Secure Messaging program was the backbone of the network utilized by parent company Surescripts 31 which was used by doctors to share patient records and information electronically 3 Kryptiq s Patient Portal allowed providers to accept payments from patients over the internet which totaled almost 10 million in 2011 3 Customers included Providence Health System MeritCare Health System GE Healthcare and MedStar Health among others 31 References edit a b Rogoway Mike January 30 2015 Kryptiq sold in 2012 will be independent again after spinning out from Surescripts The Oregonian Retrieved 2015 01 31 a b Moody Robin J December 28 2003 Kryptiq ready to expand its market reach in 2004 Portland Business Journal a b c d Siemers Erik April 13 2012 Kryptiq finds acceptance Portland Business Journal a b c d Raths David February 6 2005 Kryptiq team encrypts e mail for medical uses Portland Business Journal Kryptiq buys Houston company Portland Business Journal July 22 2003 Venture round nets Kryptiq 7 9M Portland Business Journal August 29 2003 a b Moody Robin J November 10 2003 Kryptiq buys Utah based MedShape Portland Business Journal a b Moody Robin J February 24 2005 Kryptiq rolls out disease management application Portland Business Journal a b Moody Robin J January 19 2004 Kryptiq buys Vancouver software company Portland Business Journal a b Moody Robin J February 6 2005 A Kryptiq answer Portland Business Journal a b Kryptiq raises 7 1M Portland Business Journal April 26 2005 Culverwell Wendy July 31 2005 New Sunset on horizon Portland Business Journal State invests in Kryptiq Corp Portland Business Journal September 14 2006 Moody Robin J March 4 2007 Kryptiq strengthens Blue Cross technology ties Portland Business Journal O Donnell Anthony April 1 2008 Kryptiq s Choreo Powers Regence s Contract Management Across the Enterprise Insurance amp Technology UBM Tech Rojas Burke Joe October 4 2007 Microsoft picks Hillsboro s Kryptiq for health records project The Oregonian Kryptiq sells division to Portico Systems Portland Business Journal April 21 2009 O Donnell Anthony April 22 2009 Portico Acquires Kryptiq s Choreo Health Plan Business Insurance amp Technology UBM Tech Kryptiq buys Secure Network Solutions Portland Business Journal August 19 2008 Rogoway Mike June 15 2010 Kryptiq sets move as it adds employees The Oregonian Culverwell Wendy February 28 2010 Kryptiq leases Amberglen space for new headquarters Portland Business Journal a b Rogoway Mike October 25 2010 Kryptiq takes on new investor partnership as it targets growth The Oregonian Kryptiq Corp discloses 8M investment Portland Business Journal November 26 2010 Siemers Erik August 31 2012 Hillsboro s Kryptiq acquired by Surescripts Portland Business Journal a b Rogoway Mike August 31 2012 Kryptiq sells business to Surescripts will stay in Hillsboro The Oregonian Company Overview of Enli Health Intelligence Health Care Technology Bloomberg Business Retrieved 26 October 2015 Contact Us Enli Health Intelligence Archived from the original on August 5 2016 Retrieved October 27 2016 Contact Us Enli Health Intelligence Archived from the original on October 27 2016 Retrieved October 27 2016 Hayes Elizabeth January 5 2021 Portland area health care technology provider sold to Connecticut company Portland Business Journal Retrieved December 26 2021 Cedar Gate Technologies Acquires Enli Health Intelligence Press release Cedar Gate Technologies January 5 2021 Retrieved December 26 2021 Home page Enli Health Intelligence Cedar Gate Technologies Archived from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved December 26 2021 Enli is now part of Cedar Gate Technologies a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b c d About Kryptiq Retrieved December 12 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Enli Health Intelligence amp oldid 1221537325, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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