Helium Health – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng Tech | Business | Economy Thu, 28 Aug 2025 14:01:27 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://techeconomy.ng/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-256Px-32x32.png Helium Health – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng 32 32 Helium Health vs Reliance HMO: Which HealthTech Serves Nigerians Better? https://techeconomy.ng/helium-health-vs-reliance-hmo-nigeria-healthtech/ https://techeconomy.ng/helium-health-vs-reliance-hmo-nigeria-healthtech/#comments Thu, 28 Aug 2025 14:01:27 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=166072 It’s 2025 and Nigeria still spends less on health than it does on political campaigns. The government allocates just 4% of GDP to healthcare, a far cry from the 15% recommended by the World Health Organisation. 

Meanwhile, in rural communities, one doctor is expected to look after 5,000 patients. If that doesn’t feel like a national crisis, perhaps this will: Nigerians spend an average of N5,200 every month on self-medication because they simply cannot trust hospitals to be there when they need them.

However, in the middle of this dysfunction, we’ve selected two HealthTech brands who are torchbearers for a broken system; Helium Health and Reliance HMO

Both founded in 2016, both funded by global investors, both leveraging technology. But they serve completely different corners of the healthcare puzzle: one is wiring up hospitals with digital infrastructure, the other is selling ordinary Nigerians something close to peace of mind. So, the question? Which one serves Nigerians better?

The Context: Digital Health as a Lifeline

Globally, digital health has gone beyond being experimental. The market is projected to hit $660 billion by the end of 2025, growing at nearly 25% annually since 2019. Artificial intelligence alone is set to contribute over $102 billion by 2028. 

In Nigeria, the digital health market will reach $645 million this year, driven by smartphone penetration, improved internet, and the government’s goal to digitise 70% of health records by 2025.

On the demand, 70% of Nigerian doctors now use some form of healthtech tool. Patients are booking virtual consultations more, and insurers are relying on apps to reduce paperwork. Against this backdrop, Helium Health and Reliance HMO have risen to prominence.

Leadway vs. AIICO: A Review of their Digital Strategies in a Low-Penetration Insurance Market

 

Helium Health: Building the Rails

Helium Health is the backbone of African hospitals with an indispensable product: Electronic Medical Records (EMR) and Hospital Management Information Systems (HMIS)

These systems replace dusty paper files with digital dashboards, automate billing, manage drug inventories, and streamline appointments.

Helium Health has raised $42.2 million to date and now operates in Nigeria, Ghana, Liberia, Senegal, Cameroon, Uganda and Kenya. Its acquisition of Meddy in 2021 and development of HeliumDoc allowed it to integrate AI-powered tools for telemedicine, doctor discovery, automated workflows and patient engagement tools. Through its HeliumCredit product, it also offers financing to hospitals starved of liquidity.

Hospital administrators commend Helium Health for one thing: control. With over 1,000 facilities onboarded and thousands of clinicians using its software, it has become the quiet enabler of efficiency in a chaotic system. The average patient may never hear of it, but without Helium, many hospitals would still be filing patient data in dusty cabinets.

Reliance HMO: Delivering the Ride

Reliance HMO sits on the other end, highly visible, customer-facing, and almost evangelical about access. Unlike Helium, Reliance doesn’t build tools for hospitals. It sells health insurance plans directly to individuals, families, and businesses, plans that truly work.

With $51.1 million raised so far, Reliance has built a provider network of over 2,600 hospitals in Nigeria and 3,800 globally. Its platform gives users telemedicine, cashback incentives for unused plans, and transparent, flexible options like the Red Beryl plan at ₦38,650 annually. For many SMEs and startups, this affordability is the difference between employees being insured or not at all.

Customer feedback usually highlights its quick claims process, responsive support team, and user-friendly mobile app. Reliance has also pushed innovation in chronic care, piloting programmes in diabetes management that reduced fasting blood sugar levels by 12% for participants.

In short, Reliance is the brand patients see, touch, and trust.

Head-to-Head Comparison

Category Helium Health Reliance HMO
Core Focus Digitising hospitals (B2B) Delivering health plans (B2C)
Strength EMR, HMIS, hospital financing, interoperability Telemedicine, flexible plans, cashback incentives
Reach 1,000+ hospitals across 7 countries 2,600+ providers in Nigeria, 200k+ enrollees
Funding $42.2m $51.1m
Users Healthcare providers, governments Individuals, families, SMEs
Visibility Backend—patients rarely see it Frontend—patients interact daily
Innovation HeliumCredit, AI integration, data for policy Diabetes care pilots, preventive care, digital claims
Limitation Adoption depends on hospital buy-in Affordability in Nigeria’s inflationary climate

 

Which Serves Nigerians Better?

This is not a straightforward fight. Helium Health is the engine room, Reliance HMO is the frontline face. Helium ensures hospitals can run efficiently; Reliance ensures patients can actually access care. One is building the rails, the other is driving the train.

If you’re a hospital administrator, here’s your answer: Helium Health is the partner you need. If you’re an HR manager trying to insure your staff, Reliance HMO is the obvious choice. In reality, Nigerians need both, because infrastructure without access is meaningless, and access without strong infrastructure collapses quickly.

Nigeria’s health sector will not be saved by government spending alone. It will be saved by fierce experiments like Helium Health and accessible models like Reliance HMO. Each represents a different strategy to solve the same problem: how to give Nigerians dignified, affordable, and reliable healthcare.

So, which serves Nigerians better? The answer depends on where you stand. But if both continue to grow and eventually intersect, the biggest winners won’t be the companies, it will be the patients who, for once, might actually find the system working in their favour.

]]>
https://techeconomy.ng/helium-health-vs-reliance-hmo-nigeria-healthtech/feed/ 2
Helium Health Raises $30m to Expand Fintech Product HeliumCredit https://techeconomy.ng/helium-health-raises-30-million-to-expand-fintech-product-heliumcredit/ https://techeconomy.ng/helium-health-raises-30-million-to-expand-fintech-product-heliumcredit/#respond Mon, 05 Jun 2023 14:57:03 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=103739 Helium Health, a Nigerian health tech company, has recently secured $30 million in a Series B funding round. The funding will be used to expand the reach of its fintech product, HeliumCredit.

Helium Health aims to use technology to efficiently manage healthcare records in Africa and provide access to credit for healthcare providers through HeliumCredit.

The funding round was led by AXA IM Alts and saw participation from investors such as Capria Ventures, Angaza Capital, Anne Wojcicki (Founder of 23&Me), and Flatworld Partners. Existing investors Global Ventures, Tencent, Ohara Pharmaceuticals, LCY Group, WTI, and AAIC also participated in the round.

HeliumCredit, launched in 2020, offers loans to hospitals, clinics, pharmacies, and diagnostics centers for purchasing medical equipment, and medication, and facilitating business expansions. So far, Helium Health has disbursed over $3.5 million in loans to around 200 healthcare facilities through HeliumCredit.

In addition to its funding news, Helium Health plans to launch HeliumCredit in Kenya this year. The company also aims to increase its lending portfolio to 1,000 healthcare facilities by 2024, in partnership with the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC).

Helium Health’s CEO and co-founder, Adegoke Olubusi, expressed the company’s commitment to supporting healthcare providers with finance, technology, and data to improve healthcare access in Africa. The company also plans to continue scaling its SaaS suite for healthcare providers through HeliumOS, its Electronic Medical Records and Hospital Management Information System (EMR/HMIS) solution.

Investors, such as Noor Sweid, Managing Partner at Global Ventures, have shown confidence in Helium Health and its suite of products. Sweid highlighted the company’s deep understanding of Africa’s healthcare sector and its ability to build products tailored to its needs.

Overall, the funding secured by Helium Health will contribute to its mission of making quality healthcare accessible to more Africans by leveraging technology and providing financial solutions to healthcare providers.

]]>
https://techeconomy.ng/helium-health-raises-30-million-to-expand-fintech-product-heliumcredit/feed/ 0