Galeneo was born with the purpose of recovering the values that inspired the practice of medicine when we lacked the resources that technology has brought us; technology is necessary, but not more than a humane treatment that the patient needs to face their illness and facilitate his recovery.
Our principle is to provide patients with the best possible experience through their illness, giving them access to the best professionals and the most advanced technical resources in an easy and efficient way, wherever they are.
A way of working that inspires us in the search for medical professionals who, aligned with our values, want to extend the care and supervision of their patients wherever they need it.
Galeneo brings to contemporary medical practice the knowledge, experience and a distinctive way of working, with which we aim to meet the expectations of the patient and their family environment.

Our name is inspired by Claudius Galen, the famous Greek physician, surgeon and philosopher born in Pergamon. Galen was among the first and most celebrated physicians of antiquity.
Today the term “Galenic” is used to refer poetically to physicians who practiced traditional medicine. Philosophers of a deeply humane kind of medicine. Doctors who came to their patients’ homes and charged for keeping them in good health – not just for curing them when they became ill.
If we combine that compassionate medicine with the advantages of the most advanced technology, the result is Galeneo Health. A project created by professionals with an innovative approach to traditional medicine.
By Jaime García-Prieto
CEO in Galeneo
It would not be entirely true to say that Galeneo arose from a meticulous plan crafted over many years. It is the result of both the disruption that the pandemic brought to our lives and my own family history.
As a biotechnologist and biomedical researcher, I have taken part in the discovery of therapies, in the development of technological solutions, and in the implementation of care processes that have improved the lives of many patients.
As a son and grandson of physicians, I have been lucky enough to experience traditional medicine first-hand. My grandfather, a small-town general practitioner, and my mother, an ICU physician, always practiced a type of medicine in which doctor-patient complicity was fundamental. That may be why my family consists not only of my relatives, but also their patients; people who, once they got better, continued to form part of our lives.
When the pandemic came, we launched a number of projects and services to treat patients in their homes, discovering that it was possible to set up hospitals at home. This experience led me to see how useful it would be to provide the healthcare sector with standardized medical procedures performed at home and in-person.