

With the new funding, TruDoc intends to deepen its presence in the GCC and further develop its hospital-at-home critical care program, which the company says is the largest deployment of its kind in the region.
Healthtech startup TruDoc has secured USD 15 Mn in Pre-Series B funding to accelerate the expansion of its virtual-first healthcare platform across the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).
The investment, supported by the Al Nahyan family, the Al-Ketbi family, and Pulsar Capital, will strengthen TruDoc’s ability to deliver hospital-grade care beyond traditional medical facilities.
Founded in 2011 and headquartered in the United Arab Emirates, TruDoc has built a digital healthcare model focused on continuous, technology-enabled care. The platform integrates telemedicine consultations, chronic disease management programs, remote patient monitoring, pharmacy-at-home services, diagnostics, and in-home clinical care.
Dr Ahmed Mansour, CEO, Private Department of Sheik Mohamed Bin Khaled Al Nahyan, said, “TruDoc represents a fundamentally different approach: one that scales access and efficiency while maintaining clinical integrity. This model is well aligned with the UAE’s long-term priorities and the future of healthcare delivery across the Middle East. Believing in the TruDoc model to lead this market innovation and increase the ultimate efficiency of the healthcare industry.”
Over time, the company has expanded across markets, including the UAE and Saudi Arabia, while collaborating with insurers, employers, and healthcare providers.
With the new funding, TruDoc intends to deepen its presence in the GCC and further develop its hospital-at-home critical care program, which the company says is the largest deployment of its kind in the region.
The initiative enables patients with serious conditions to receive hospital-level treatment from home through a combination of remote monitoring, medical devices, and coordinated clinical support.
Vish Narain, Executive Chairman at TruDoc, said, “For centuries, healthcare has been organised around buildings, patients moving toward facilities, systems optimised for episodic care. That architecture no longer reflects how people live, age, or manage chronic disease. What TruDoc is building is healthcare as infrastructure: continuous, accountable, and designed to operate beyond four walls, at population scale.”
The company’s broader strategy revolves around a “care operating system” that connects digital consultations, diagnostics, and home-based services into a unified platform. By doing so, TruDoc aims to reduce reliance on physical hospital infrastructure while allowing healthcare systems to manage rising demand more efficiently.
The model also seeks to improve medication adherence, enable earlier clinical intervention, and lower unnecessary hospital admissions.
Asad Khan, CEO at TruDoc, said, “The question is no longer whether high-quality care can be delivered outside hospitals; it’s how fast healthcare systems can adapt to that reality. TruDoc has shown that hospital-grade, high-acuity care can be delivered safely and effectively in homes, at scale. This capital allows us to expand that model across the GCC while staying relentlessly focused on clinical excellence and patient trust.”
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