Samsung Acquires Xealth to Drive AI-Powered Hospital-at-Home for Long-Term Care

Samsung Electronics announced that it has signed an agreement to acquire Xealth, a unique healthcare integration platform that brings diverse digital health tools and care programs that benefit patients and providers. (Source: Fotor AI)

On July 8, 2025, Samsung Electronics announced its acquisition of Xealth, a major milestone toward building a truly connected care ecosystem. This strategic move integrates wearable wellness technology with clinical workflows, spanning 500+ hospitals and 70+ digital health solutions. For the eldercare and long-term care (LTC) sectors, it signals a new era—one driven by real-time remote patient monitoring (RPM), AI-powered insights, and scalable hospital-at-home models that can improve outcomes while reducing system costs.

Integration Benefits & Market Potential

  • Seamless Wellness-Medical Continuum: Samsung wearables now feed real-time health data directly into clinician dashboards through Xealth. This closes the gap between daily self-tracking and clinical decision-making, enabling more timely interventions.

  • Scalable Connected Care Ecosystem: Xealth’s established reach—500+ U.S. hospitals and 70+ digital partners—will be amplified by Samsung’s global device ecosystem, accelerating remote care delivery and enabling nationwide LTC deployment.

  • Market Readiness: The U.S. home care market is projected to exceed $107 billion in 2025, fueled by aging demographics, caregiver shortages, and increasing demand for in-home medical services.

Why Long-term care & Eldercare Stand to Gain

  • Remote Monitoring & Telehomecare: The Samsung–Xealth integration supports long-term care models based on telehealth, home sensors, and continuous monitoring, essential for aging-in-place initiatives.

  • AI and Automation Adoption: With connected care and AI-enabled tools topping the list of 2025 healthcare priorities, Samsung’s sensor-rich wearables, paired with Xealth’s platform, offer a ready-made solution for modernizing eldercare.

  • Hospital-at-Home Expansion: As more health systems explore virtual hospital models (e.g., Seha in Saudi Arabia, U.S.-based acute home care programs), this acquisition supports scalable, tech-enabled alternatives to traditional inpatient care.

  • Long-Term Care and CareTech providers can leverage the Samsung–Xealth platform to scale integrated remote monitoring and hospital-at-home services, improving care access and reducing operational costs in aging-in-place models.

  • At the same time, investing in workforce training on AI-powered tools and telemonitoring—combined with effective use of real-time health data—can help demonstrate measurable outcomes and strengthen reimbursement under value-based care models.

Emerging Trends & Strategic Insights

  • AI-Powered Wearables: Samsung’s newest wearables are integrating advanced AI for real-time health coaching, sleep analysis, and preventive alerts, raising the bar for consumer-grade medical devices.

  • Smart Home Integration: Fall detection, medication reminders, and environmental sensors are rapidly becoming staples in LTC tech, enhancing safety and independence for older adults.

  • Voice-Assist & Conversational Devices: The rise of voice-enabled AI wearables (e.g., UK’s MICA) signals strong demand for intuitive, senior-friendly interfaces in daily care routines.

  • Global Virtual Health Expansion: Virtual hospitals and hybrid care models are scaling globally, indicating a shift in care delivery that aligns perfectly with Samsung–Xealth’s joint capabilities.

Competitive Edge for Care Technologies

  • Personalized, Coordinated Care: Integrating wearables, RPM tools, and AI into unified care pathways allows providers to deliver individualized, proactive care, reducing unnecessary hospital visits and caregiver burnout.

  • Plug-and-Play Ecosystem Access: The Samsung-Xealth framework offers tech providers streamlined access to hospital systems, enabling rapid deployment and lower integration friction.

  • Efficiency and Cost Reduction: Automation in scheduling, early warning systems, and care coordination helps providers overcome workforce limitations and rising operational costs.

  • Policy Alignment: Increasing reimbursement support for tech-enabled care, Medicaid's “80/20” rule, and public funding for home-based care create a favourable policy environment for CareTech solutions.

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Source:

Samsung Newsroom

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