The digital health M&A wave is continuing, this time with Universal Health Services’ plan to acquire virtual behavioral health company Talkspace for $835 million. And it’s a deal that makes a lot of sense for both parties, experts say.
Universal Health Services (UHS), based in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, is a for-profit health system operating 29 inpatient acute care facilities, 346 inpatient behavioral health facilities and 168 outpatient and other facilities. New York City-based Talkspace has a network of about 6,000 professionals offering virtual therapy, psychiatry and medication management. Patients can connect with their clinicians via video, audio, chat or asynchronous text messaging. It serves both employers and health plans.
Joining forces will help “establish a truly national, end-to-end platform for behavioral health that seamlessly integrates virtual and in-person care,” said Marc D. Miller, president and CEO of UHS. Talkspace will become a subsidiary of the UHS Behavioral Health Division, and UHS will bring on Talkspace’s network of 6,000 therapists. This will expand the health system’s reach to patients who prefer virtual care, especially younger populations, Miller said.
“Talkspace’s virtual platform perfectly complements the high-quality care already provided at our facilities,” Miller said in an email. “This acquisition enables UHS to accelerate our outpatient and telehealth efforts, ensuring smoother transitions across care settings and broadening access to treatment for patients everywhere.”
Talkspace will also be able to refer patients who are in need of more intensive outpatient, partial hospitalization or inpatient care to UHS’ facilities.
“Integrating with UHS, one of the nation’s largest providers of inpatient behavioral health services, was a natural solution to the growing demand for comprehensive outpatient care. By uniting our strengths, we are providing patients with a full spectrum of care under one umbrella,” said Dr. Jon Cohen, CEO of Talkspace. Following the acquisition, Cohen will report to Matt Peterson, executive vice president and president of UHS’ Behavioral Health Division.
According to one healthcare expert, this is a strategic move for both companies. For UHS, the deal allows the company to recruit patients who primarily use telemedicine but may benefit from inpatient or outpatient services, as well as attract providers at a time when recruiting therapists is costly. For Talkspace, the acquisition gives them more stability.
“Think of Talkspace as a front door, as well as a mechanism to take advantage of its payer relationships across commercial and government payors. … For Talkspace, it provides stability in the face of volatile markets,” said Christina Farr, managing director at consulting firm Manatt Health. “While this might not have been a deal that resembled the pandemic peak, it is still relatively healthy overall for a tech-enabled services company. The markets are aligning around the idea that telemedicine is here to stay, but it’s a tool in the toolkit.”
Another analyst agreed that the transaction is beneficial for both UHS and Talkspace.
“It’s mutually reinforcing in that when somebody winds up in inpatient treatment, they sort of graduate to outpatient treatment, and then this gives the institution something else to keep them tethered to the organization,” said Michael Abrams, managing partner of Numerof & Associates. “It gives the organization a full continuum reach, if you will, making it into a full behavioral health continuum. And in the same way that people can move from inpatient to outpatient to digital, people that start out on the digital end can wind up moving to inpatient services.”
The deal is expected to close in the third quarter of 2026.
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