Bardavon bid to revolutionize workers’ compensation just got a $15 million boost
November 17, 2018 | Startland News Staff
Timing is everything, said Matt Condon, announcing this week $15 million in new financing to help scale his Overland Park-based company’s reach into markets from coast to coast.
“Our national expansion is coming at a time when employers across the country are recognizing that they must play a lead role in the transformation of health care,” said Condon, founder and CEO of Bardavon Health Innovations.
Bardavon’s physical medicine clinical analytics platform for workers’ compensation already is active in 21 states, according to the company, which was named one of Startland’s Top Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2018. Click here to learn more about why Bardavon was selected.
The four-year-old company’s latest expansion push comes thanks to $15 million in new funding led by NewRoad Capital Partners, based in Northwest Arkansas, which saw proven success in the venture-backed, cloud-based clinical intelligence and analytics of Bardavon, Condon said.
“This investment confirms that change is coming to health care, that workers’ compensation programs will help catalyze the transformation to quality-based medicine, and that Bardavon is well-positioned to lead that charge,” he said.
Health care cost containment strategies of the past simply have not worked, added Paul Morris, COO of Bardavon.
“We spend more each year on health care yet are less satisfied with the experience and outcome. Bardavon is changing that,” he said. “Our data-driven solutions and clinical expertise optimize care for each injured worker, enable the provider community to compete on quality, and improve the productivity of the workforce for our employers.”
The Overland Park firm — among the portfolio companies of the KCRise Fund, which has now invested more than $6 million across more than a dozen scaling Kansas City ventures — is poised for explosive growth, said Clete Brewer, managing partner of NewRoad Capital Partners in Rogers, Arkansas.
“Having followed Bardavon’s progress for three years and observed the breakthrough results in quality outcomes they have achieved with national employers, we are excited to be the lead investor that fuels their national expansion,” Brewer said.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Investing in the arts earns KC designation as UNESCO’s only ‘City of Music’ in US
Landing on a United Nations agency’s City of Music list reflects more than Kansas City’s century-old link to American jazz, said Jacob Wagner. “This designation is a recognition of our investment and commitment to music, arts and creativity as a driver of urban economic development,” said Wagner, faculty director of the Center for Neighborhoods at…
PayIt exec departs to launch Australia-based OpenCities office in KC
An executive with Kansas City-based PayIt has departed the company to open an area office for another government tech firm. Previously head of local government solutions at PayIt, Luke Norris now is leading the Kansas City office of Australia-based OpenCities, which is a provider of website and digital services for governments across the world. “The…
Cooking class curator wins Google-backed Startup Weekend competition
Nine teams made it through Startup Weekend, but only one team earned the dough: PopChef, which cooked up a platform to sign up for interactive kitchen classes with local chefs. PopChef co-founders Zack Kern and Ruby Montoya were ecstatic to win the competition, Kern said. In addition to receiving an hour of consulting with Lesa…
Preteen inventor’s kid-friendly Comfy Cup athletic gear ready to leave the dugout, family says
A preteen baseball player who helped develop a more comfortable athletic cup for young athletes wants to scale the business to include a deeper product line and sizes for adults. Lenexa native Kyler Russell, who turned 12 Thursday, invented Comfy Cup as a Little League player. He was required to wear an athletic cup, even…
