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XRP Healthcare Sets Sights on Q3 2025 IPO, Signaling Ambitious Growth in AI-Powered Healthcare

XRP Healthcare Sets Sights on Q3 2025 IPO, Signaling Ambitious Growth in AI-Powered Healthcare

Fast-growing innovator in AI-driven healthcare and mergers & acquisitions, XRP Healthcare has announced it will be a public company by Q3 2025

 

The decision, announced on Tuesday, shaves two years off the company’s original timeline, which had targeted 2027, reflecting a bold push to expand its footprint in a rapidly evolving industry.
The news follows XRP Healthcare’s recent acquisition and the development of an expanding suite of AI innovations.
Speaking to reporters, Whitney Lynn, the company’s chairman and a veteran dealmaker with over $10 billion in mergers to his name, described the move as a defining moment.
“We’ve been laying the groundwork for months,” Lynn said.
This IPO isn’t just about going public—it’s about speeding up our mission to transform healthcare, starting with what we’ve already built in Uganda.
That foundation took shape with XRP Healthcare’s acquisition of Pharma Ville, a pharmacy chain spanning five wholesale and two retail locations across Uganda.
The deal, finalized earlier this year, gives the company a direct line into Africa’s healthcare market—a sector projected to hit $259 billion in the coming years.
For Uganda’s 46 million residents, where more than half rely on private providers, the move promises better access to medicine and care.
Laban Roomes, XRP Healthcare’s chief operating officer said that Pharma Ville isn’t just a purchase—but their launchpad.

 

“With those seven locations, we’ve got the infrastructure to scale. Going public by September unlocks the capital to make that happen, not just in Uganda but across the region.”

 

The company has wasted no time building on that base, forging partnerships with global players like Incepta Pharmaceuticals for vaccines, Ascensia Diabetes Care for diabetes tools, and Marie Stopes Uganda for reproductive health services.

 

Perhaps most striking is an exclusive deal with Isansys Lifecare to bring the Patient Status Engine (PSE) to Africa. The wireless medical platform, packed with sensors and predictive AI, aims to lighten the load on overstretched hospitals by enabling remote care—a lifeline for a continent grappling with resource shortages.

 

Backstopping this expansion is the XRPH AI App, a digital health tool that’s already making waves. Available on Google Play and Apple’s App Store, the app offers multilingual medical guidance powered by artificial intelligence, a feature tailored for regions where doctors are scarce.

 

Users can now upload photos of rashes or swelling for AI analysis, with a “Doctor Search & Connect” option set to roll out next quarter, linking patients to local physicians.

 

Kain Roomes, the company’s CEO and Laban’s brother, sees it as more than tech—it’s personal. “In Africa, private healthcare delivers half the services, but it’s fragmented,” he explained.

 

“We’re here to stitch it together, make it better. This IPO is the fuel to get us there faster.”

 

The IPO, steered by ARC Group, a heavyweight in capital markets advising, is just the first step. Charles Chong, ARC’s vice president of EMEA capital markets, hinted at bigger plans during an interview. “Canada’s the starting line,” he said.

 

 

“Within five years, we’re eyeing a U.S. listing to broaden their reach.” Abraham Cinta, ARC’s CEO, was even more bullish:

 

 

“Going public puts them under a spotlight that could multiply their impact tenfold—maybe a hundredfold.”

 

 

 

For now, XRP Healthcare is focused on execution. With trademarks locked in across the UK, EU, UAE, and Uganda, the company is safeguarding its brand as it plots moves into Kenya and Rwanda, building on Uganda’s playbook.

 

 

The Roomes brothers, alongside Lynn, exuded confidence—less flash, more grit—as they navigate this high-stakes pivot.

 

 

 

In Uganda, where over 6,000 private providers operate in a patchwork system, XRP Healthcare’s model could mean the difference between a mother getting medicine for her child or going without.

 

 

The PSE platform might let a rural patient recover at home instead of trekking to a crowded clinic. The AI app could give a farmer in a remote village answers when no doctor’s around.
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