UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                  FORM 10-QSB/A

(Mark One)

[X]      QUARTERLY REPORT UNDER SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE 
         ACT OF 1934

         For the quarterly period ended: March 31, 2004

[ ]      TRANSITION REPORT UNDER SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE 
         ACT

         Commission File Number: 0-30275


                                  I-TRAX, INC.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
        (Exact name of small business issuer as specified in its charter)

                                    Delaware
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
         (State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)

                                   23-3057155
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)

                           4 Hillman Drive, Suite 130
                         Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania 19317
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    (Address of principal executive offices)

                                 (610) 459-2405
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           (Issuer's telephone number)

                One Logan Square, 130 N. 18th Street, Suite 2615
                        Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (Former name, former address and former fiscal year, if changed since last
                                    report)

Check whether the issuer (1) filed all reports required to be filed by Section
13 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act during the past 12 months (or for such shorter
period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been
subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes [X] No [ ]

State the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer's classes of common
equity, as of the latest practicable date: As of April 30, 2004, the number of
outstanding shares of common stock, par value $.001 per share, was 28,448,121.

Transitional Small Business Disclosure Format (check one):  Yes [ ]   No [X]



                              Explanatory Statement

         This amendment amends I-trax, Inc.'s Quarterly Report on Form 10-QSB
for the quarter ended March 31, 2004, filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission on May 14, 2004, and previously amended by Form 10-QSB/A filed on
August 11, 2004. This amendment:

         o        Amends the pro forma financial information, which gives effect
                  to the acquisition of CHD Meridian Healthcare by I-trax as
                  though the transaction had occurred on January 1, 2003 and is
                  presented in Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
                  Condition and Results of Operations, to reflect an accounting
                  change as a result of which all pharmaceutical pass-through
                  contracts of CHD Meridian Healthcare are reported on a net
                  basis and pharmaceutical performance incentives, previously
                  recorded as reductions of operating expense, are reclassifed
                  to revenue.

         o        Amends the supplemental disclosure of consolidated financial
                  statements of CHD Meridian Healthcare and subsidiaries for the
                  quarters ended March 31, 2004 and 2003 to also reflect an
                  accounting change as a result of which all pharmaceutical
                  pass-through contracts of CHD Meridian Healthcare are reported
                  on a net basis and pharmaceutical performance incentives,
                  previously recorded as reductions of operating expense, are
                  reclassifed to revenue.

         Except as described above, no other changes have been made to our
Quarterly Report on Form 10-QSB for the quarter ended March 31, 2004 filed on
May 14, 2004 and amended on August 11, 2004.

                                       2



                          PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Item 1.           Financial Statements




                                  I-TRAX, INC.
              INDEX TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                   (UNAUDITED)



                                                                                                        
                                                                                                           Page No.


Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm                                                        4

Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets at March 31, 2004 (unaudited) and December 31, 2003                      5

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations
     for the three months ended March 31, 2004 and 2003 (unaudited)                                            6

Condensed Consolidated Statement of Stockholders' Equity
     for the three months ended March 31, 2004 (unaudited)                                                     7

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
     for the three months ended March 31, 2004 and 2003 (unaudited)                                            8

Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements                                                          10



                                       3



             Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm




To the Board of Directors and Stockholders
      of I-trax, Inc.

We have  reviewed  the  accompanying  condensed  consolidated  balance  sheet of
I-trax, Inc. (a Delaware corporation) and Subsidiaries as of March 31, 2004, and
the related  condensed  consolidated  statements  of  operations,  stockholders'
equity and cash flows for the three-month periods ended March 31, 2004 and 2003.
These financial statements are the responsibility of the company's management.

We conducted our reviews in accordance  with the standards of the Public Company
Accounting  Oversight  Board  (United  States).  A review of  interim  financial
information  consists  principally of applying analytical  procedures and making
inquiries of persons  responsible  for financial and accounting  matters.  It is
substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in accordance with generally
accepted  auditing  standards,  the  objective of which is the  expression of an
opinion  regarding  the  condensed  financial   statements  taken  as  a  whole.
Accordingly, we do not express such an opinion.

Based on our reviews, we are not aware of any material modifications that should
be made to the condensed  financial  statements referred to above for them to be
in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

We have  previously  audited,  in  accordance  with the  standards of the Public
Company  Accounting  Oversight  Board (United  States),  the balance sheet as of
December  31,  2003,  and the related  consolidated  statements  of  operations,
stockholders'  equity  and cash  flows for the year then  ended  (not  presented
herein);  and in our report dated February 16, 2004, we expressed an unqualified
opinion on those financial statements. In our opinion, the information set forth
in the  accompanying  condensed  consolidated  balance  sheet as of December 31,
2003,  is  fairly  stated,  in  all  material  respects,   in  relation  to  the
consolidated balance sheet from which it has been derived.


GOLDSTEIN GOLUB KESSLER LLP
New York, New York

May 4, 2004

                                       4





                                                                                                                

                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                      CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                                   (UNAUDITED)
                        (in thousands, except share data)

                                     ASSETS

                                                                                      March 31, 2004         December 31,
                                                                                        (unaudited)              2003
                                                                                      ----------------    ----------------
Current assets
     Cash and cash equivalents                                                            $     9,989          $      574
     Accounts receivable, net                                                                  14,027                 549
     Income tax receivable                                                                        274                  --
     Other current assets                                                                       1,170                 188
                                                                                      ----------------    ----------------
         Total current assets                                                                  25,460               1,311
                                                                                      ----------------    ----------------

Property and equipment, net                                                                     4,903               1,675
Goodwill                                                                                       45,238               8,424
Customer list, net                                                                             29,775                 769
Other intangible assets, net                                                                    2,431               1,400
Other long term assets                                                                             61                  24
                                                                                      ----------------    ----------------

       Total assets                                                                       $   107,868         $    13,603
                                                                                      ================    ================


                      LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

Current liabilities
     Accounts payable                                                                     $     6,870         $       606
     Accrued expenses                                                                           4,575                 361
     Due to officers and related parties                                                           --                 280
     Notes payable                                                                              2,000                  --
     Net liabilities of discontinued operations                                                 1,299                  --
     Other current liabilities                                                                  6,224                 355
                                                                                      ----------------    ----------------
       Total current liabilities                                                               20,968               1,602
                                                                                      ----------------    ----------------

Common stock warrants                                                                              --               2,760
Note payable                                                                                   10,000                  --
Other long term liabilities                                                                     2,530                 856
                                                                                      ----------------    ----------------

       Total liabilities                                                                       33,498               5,218
                                                                                      ----------------    ----------------

Commitments and contingencies                                                                      --                  --

Stockholders' equity
     Preferred stock - $.001 par value, 2,000,000 shares authorized,
       1,200,000 and -0- issued and outstanding, respectively                                       1                  --
     Common stock - $.001 par value, 100,000,000 shares authorized,
       24,581,421 and 13,966,817 shares issued and outstanding, respectively                       24                  14
     Additional paid in capital                                                               131,774              47,276
     Accumulated deficit                                                                      (57,429)            (38,905)
                                                                                      ----------------    ----------------
       Total stockholders' equity                                                              74,370               8,385
                                                                                      ----------------    ----------------
Total liabilities and stockholders' equity                                                $   107,868         $    13,603
                                                                                      ================    ================

                  See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements (unaudited).



                                       5





                                                                                                             

                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
               FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 2004 AND 2003
                                   (UNAUDITED)
                        (in thousands, except share data)



                                                                               Three months           Three months
                                                                                   ended                  ended
                                                                              March 31, 2004         March 31, 2003
                                                                             ------------------     ------------------

Net revenue                                                                        $     1,447            $     1,616
                                                                             ------------------     ------------------

Costs and expenses:
     Operating expenses                                                                    697                    561
     General and administrative expenses                                                 2,021                  1,004
     Depreciation and amortization                                                         435                    437
                                                                             ------------------     ------------------
Total costs and expenses                                                                 3,153                  2,002
                                                                             ------------------     ------------------

Operating loss                                                                          (1,706)                  (386)
                                                                             ------------------     ------------------

Other expenses:
     Interest expense                                                                      613                    321
     Amortization of financing costs                                                        35                     57
     Other expenses                                                                        350                    200
                                                                             ------------------     ------------------
Total other expenses                                                                       998                    578
                                                                             ------------------     ------------------

Net loss                                                                                (2,704)                  (964)

Less deemed dividends applicable to preferred stockholders                              15,820                     --
                                                                             ------------------     ------------------

Net loss applicable to common stockholders                                        $    (18,524)            $     (964)
                                                                             ------------------     ------------------

Loss per common share:

Basic and diluted                                                                        (1.20)                  (.10)
                                                                             ==================     ==================

Weighted average number of shares outstanding:                                      15,405,353              9,372,727
                                                                             ==================     ==================

                  See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements (unaudited).



                                       6





                                                                                                          

                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
            CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                    FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 2004
                                   (UNAUDITED)
                        (in thousands, except share data)

                                                                                    
                                      Preferred Stock           Common Stock          Additional                         Total 
                                  ------------------------ ------------------------    Paid-in       Accumulated       Stockholders'
                                     Shares       Amount      Shares       Amount      Capital         Deficit           Equity
                                  -----------  ----------- ----------- ------------  ------------- -------------  ----------------
Balances at January 1, 2004               --     $     --   13,966,817     $     14    $    47,276   $   (38,905)       $    8,385
                                                            
Reclassification of common                                  
   stock warrants to paid in                                
   capital                                --           --           --           --          3,110            --             3,110
                                                            
Issuance of common stock in                                 
   connection with conversion                               
   of promissory note and other                             
   settlement, net of costs               --           --       63,012           --             71            --                71
                                                            
Issuance of common stock for                                
   conversion of debenture                                  
   and accrued interest                   --           --      427,106           --            747            --               747
                                                            
Issuance of common stock for                                
   exercise of warrants                   --           --      124,486           --             30            --                30
                                                            
Sale of preferred stock, net of                             
   costs                           1,000,000            1           --           --         23,509            --            23,510
                                                            
Issuance of preferred stock for                             
   acquisition of CHD                                       
   Meridian                          400,000           --           --           --         10,000            --            10,000
                                                            
Redemption of preferred stock       (200,000)          --           --           --         (5,000)           --            (5,000)
                                                            
Issuance of common stock for                                
   acquisition of CHD                                       
   Meridian                               --           --   10,000,000           10         36,290            --            36,300
                                                            
Beneficial conversion feature                               
   in connection with                                       
   issuance of preferred stock            --           --           --           --         15,820       (15,820)               --
                                                            
Preferred stock dividend                  --           --           --           --            (79)           --               (79)
                                                            
Net loss for the three months                               
   ended March 31, 2004                   --           --           --           --             --        (2,704)           (2,704)
                                  -----------  ----------- ------------ ------------  ------------- -------------  ----------------
                                                            
Balances at March 31, 2004         1,200,000     $      1   24,581,421     $     24    $   131,774   $   (57,429)       $   74,370
                                  ===========  =========== ============ ============  ============= =============  ================
                                                           
                  See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements (unaudited).


                                       7





                                                                                                           


                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
               FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 2004 AND 2003
                                   (UNAUDITED)
                        (in thousands, except share data)



                                                                                  Three months      Three months
                                                                                     ended              ended
                                                                                 March 31, 2004    March 31, 2003
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------

Operating activities:
     Net loss                                                                        $    (2,704)        $     (964)
     Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used in operating
       activities:
         Depreciation and amortization                                                       435                437
         Accretion of discount on notes payable charged to interest expense
            and beneficial conversion value of debenture                                     573                253
         Increase in fair value of common stock warrants                                     350                 --
         Amortization of debt issuance costs                                                  34                 58
         Write-off of deposit on cancelled acquisition                                        --                200
         Other non-cash items                                                                 --                (29)

Changes in operating assets and liabilities, net of acquisition:
     Decrease (increase) in accounts receivable                                             (668)               104
     Decrease (increase) in other current assets                                              20                (80)
     (Decrease) increase in accounts payable                                                (102)                80
     Increase in accrued expenses                                                             70                217
     (Decrease) increase in other current liabilities                                        236               (852)
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------
Net cash used in operating activities                                                     (1,756)              (576)
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------

Investing activities:
     Purchases of property, plant and equipment                                             (169)              (191)
     Acquisition of CHD Meridian, net of acquired cash                                   (18,134)                --
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------
Net cash used in investing activities                                                    (18,303)              (191)
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------

Financing activities:
     Principal payments on capital leases                                                    (18)                (1)
     Repayment to/proceeds from related parties                                             (280)               440
     Repayment of note payable                                                              (618)                --
     Proceeds from exercise of warrants                                                       30                 --
     Proceeds from bank credit facility, net of issuance costs                            11,850                 --
     Proceeds from sale of preferred stock, net of issuance costs                         23,510                 --
     Redemption of preferred stock                                                        (5,000)                --
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------

Net cash provided by financing activities                                                 29,474                439
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents                                       9,415               (328)

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period                                             574                360
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period                                           $     9,989          $      32
                                                                                ================= ==================

Supplemental disclosure of non-cash flow information: Cash paid during the year
     for:
       Interest                                                                       $      209          $      16
                                                                                ================= ==================

                         (Continues on following page.)


                  See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements (unaudited).



                                       8





                                                                                                             

                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
               FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31, 2004 AND 2003

                         (Continues from previous page.)

                                                                                  Three months      Three months
                                                                                     ended              ended
                                                                                 March 31, 2004    March 31, 2003
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------

Schedule of non-cash financing activities:

     Reclassification of common stock warrants to paid in capital                    $     3,110                 --
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------
     Issuance of common stock in connection with conversion of promissory
       note and other settlement                                                     $        71                 --
                                                                                ================= ==================

     Issuance of common stock in connection with conversion of debenture        
       payable                                                                       $       747                 --
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------
     Beneficial conversion feature in connection with issuance of preferred
       stock                                                                         $    15,820                 --
                                                                                ================= ==================

     Issuance of common and preferred stock in connection with the              
       acquisition of CHD Meridian                                                   $    46,300                 --
                                                                                ================= ==================

     Preferred stock dividend                                                        $        79                 --
                                                                                ================= ==================
     Purchase of all capital stock of CHD Meridian and assumption of liabilities
       in the acquisition as follows:
         Fair value of non-cash tangible assets acquired                             $    17,257                 --
         Goodwill                                                                         36,814                 --
         Customer list                                                                    29,184                 --
         Other intangibles                                                                 1,167                 --
         Cash paid, net of cash acquired (includes $85 of transaction costs
           incurred in a prior period)                                                   (18,219)                --
         Common stock issued                                                             (36,300)                --
         Preferred stock issued                                                          (10,000)                --
                                                                                ----------------- ------------------
         Liabilities assumed                                                         $   (19,903)
                                                                                ================= ==================



    See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements (unaudited).

                                       9



                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                   (UNAUDITED)



NOTE 1--ORGANIZATION

I-trax,  Inc.  (the  "Company")  was  incorporated  in the State of  Delaware on
September  15, 2000.  On March 19, 2004,  the Company  consummated a merger with
Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc., a private company, which does
business as CHD Meridian  Healthcare  ("CHD  Meridian").  (See Note  3--Business
Combination.)

Following the merger, the Company offers two categories of services: (1) on-site
services  such as  occupational  health,  primary  care,  corporate  health  and
pharmacy and (2) personalized health management programs.

The Company conducts its on-site services through CHD Meridian Healthcare,  LLC,
a Delaware  limited  liability  company ("CHD Meridian LLC"), and its subsidiary
companies, and its personalized health management programs through I-trax Health
Management  Solutions,  LLC, a Delaware limited  liability  company,  and I-trax
Health Management Solutions, Inc., a Delaware corporation.

Physician  services  at the  Company's  on-site  locations  are  provided  under
management  agreements  with  affiliated  physician   associations,   which  are
organized  professional  corporations that hire licensed  physicians who provide
medical  services (the  "Physician  Groups").  The Physician  Groups provide all
medical aspects of the Company's on-site services,  including the development of
professional  standards,  policies and procedures.  The Company  provides a wide
array of business  services to the Physician  Groups,  including  administrative
services, support personnel, facilities, marketing, and non-medical services.

NOTE 2--INTERIM RESULTS AND BASIS OF PRESENTATION

The accompanying unaudited financial statements have been prepared in accordance
with accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the United States of America
for interim  financial  information,  the  instructions  to Form 10-QSB and Item
310(b) of Regulation S-B promulgated under the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934.
In the opinion of  management,  the  unaudited  financial  statements  have been
prepared on the same basis as the annual  financial  statements  and reflect all
adjustments  necessary to present fairly the financial  position as of March 31,
2004 and the results of the operations and cash flows for the three months ended
March 31,  2004.  The results for the three  months  ended March 31, 2004 do not
include the operations of CHD Meridian even though the merger was consummated on
March 19,  2004  because  the Company  and CHD  Meridian  agreed for  accounting
purposes to  consolidate  results of  operations  effective as of April 1, 2004.
Accordingly, the results for the quarter ended March 31, 2004 are not indicative
of the  results to be  expected  for any  subsequent  quarter or the fiscal year
ending  December  31,  2004.  The balance  sheet at  December  31, 2003 has been
derived from the audited financial statements of I-trax at that date.

Certain  information  and footnote  disclosures  normally  included in financial
statements prepared in accordance with accounting  principles generally accepted
in the United States of America have been  condensed or omitted  pursuant to the
Securities and Exchange Commission's rules and regulations.

Loss per common  share is  computed  pursuant  to SFAS No.  128,  "Earnings  Per
Share."  Basic loss per share is  computed  as net income  (loss)  available  to
common  stockholders  divided by the weighted  average  number of common  shares
outstanding  for the  period.  Diluted  loss per share  reflects  the  potential
dilution that could occur from common  shares  issuable  through stock  options,
warrants  and  convertible  preferred  stock.  As of March  31,  2004 and  2003,
5,822,929 and 3,863,604  shares  issuable upon exercise of options and warrants,
respectively, were excluded from the diluted loss per share computation, because
their effect would be anti-dilutive.

                                       10



                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 2--INTERIM RESULTS AND BASIS OF PRESENTATION (continued)

These  unaudited  financial  statements  should be read in conjunction  with the
Company's  audited  financial  statements  and the  financial  statements of CHD
Meridian and notes thereto for the year ended  December 31, 2003 included in the
Company's annual report on Form 10-KSB for the year ended December 31, 2003.

For  comparability,  certain 2003 amounts have been  reclassified  and combined,
where appropriate,  to conform to the financial  statement  presentation used in
2004.

As stated above, the consolidated financial statements include the balance sheet
of CHD Meridian LLC, its wholly owned  subsidiaries,  and the Physician  Groups.
The  financial  statements  of the Physician  Groups are  consolidated  with CHD
Meridian  LLC in  accordance  with the nominee  shareholder  model of EITF 97-2,
"Application  of FASB  Statement  No. 94 and APB  Opinion  No.  16 to  Physician
Practice  Management  Entities  and  Certain  Other  Entities  with  Contractual
Management  Arrangements."  CHD  Meridian  LLC has  unilateral  control over the
assets and operations of the Physician Groups.

Consolidation of the Physician  Groups with CHD Meridian LLC, and  consequently,
the Company,  is necessary to present fairly the financial  position and results
of operations of the Company.  Control of the Physician  Groups is perpetual and
other than temporary because of the nominee shareholder model and the management
agreements between the entities. The net tangible assets of the Physician Groups
were not material at March 31, 2004. All significant  intercompany  accounts and
transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.


NOTE 3--BUSINESS COMBINATION

On March 19,  2004,  the Company  merged  with CHD  Meridian,  a privately  held
company and a leading  provider  of  outsourced,  employer-sponsored  healthcare
services to Fortune 1,000 companies.

Pursuant to the merger agreement,  the Company,  (1) issued 10,000,000 shares of
common stock valued at $36,300,000 utilizing $3.63 per share, (2) issued 400,000
shares of  convertible  preferred  stock  (with each share  convertible  into 10
shares of common stock at a price of $2.50 per share or 4,000,000  shares in the
aggregate)  at $25 per  share  or  $10,000,000  in the  aggregate,  and (3) paid
approximately   $25,508,000  to  the  CHD  Meridian  stockholders.   Immediately
following  the closing of the merger,  the Company also redeemed from former CHD
Meridian stockholders that participated in the merger, pro rata, an aggregate of
200,000 shares of convertible preferred stock at its original issue price of $25
per share or $5,000,000. The Company has filed a registration statement with the
Securities  and Exchange  Commission  to register the common stock issued in the
merger and issuable upon conversion of convertible preferred stock issued in the
merger.

The former CHD Meridian  stockholders will also receive additional shares of the
Company's common stock if CHD Meridian,  continuing its operations following the
closing of the merger as CHD Meridian LLC, achieves calendar 2004 milestones for
earnings before  interest,  taxes,  depreciation and amortization (or EBITDA) as
follows: If EBITDA equals or exceeds  $8,100,000,  the number of such additional
common  shares  payable will be 3,473,280;  the number of such shares  increases
proportionately up to a maximum of 3,859,200  additional shares of the Company's
common stock if EBITDA equals or exceeds  $9,000,000.  In  connection  with this
earn-out, the Company placed 3,859,200 shares in escrow.

                                       11



                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                   (UNAUDITED)


NOTE 3--BUSINESS COMBINATION (continued)

The Company funded the cash portion of the merger  consideration  by (1) selling
1,000,000  shares of  convertible  preferred  stock at $25 per share  (with each
share convertible into 10 shares of common stock at a price of $2.50 per share),
for gross  proceeds  of  $25,000,000,  and (2) drawing  $12,000,000  under a new
$20,000,000 senior secured credit facility with a national lender. (See Note 6 -
Long Term Debt.)

In connection with the sale and issuance of the convertible preferred stock, the
Company  reported  $15,820,000  as a deemed  dividend to preferred  stockholders
representing the beneficial  conversion  value for the underlying  common stock.
The  beneficial  conversion  value  is the  benefit  realized  by the  preferred
stockholder  and is treated as a dividend  on the  convertible  preferred  stock
solely for the purpose of computing earnings per share. The dividend is computed
by  multiplying  (1) the difference  between the value of the underlying  common
stock  calculated using average closing price for the three days prior and three
days after the  announcement  of the merger ($3.63 per share) and the conversion
price  ($2.50 per share) by (2) the number of shares of common  stock into which
the convertible  preferred stock outstanding at the merger's  effective time was
convertible (14,000,000 shares).

The aggregate  purchase price of $72,977,000 for this  transaction is summarized
as follows:

Fair value of tangible assets acquired (includes         $   25,715,000
    cash of $8,444,000)
Liabilities assumed                                         (19,903,000)
Goodwill                                                     36,814,000
Customer list                                                29,184,000
Other intangibles                                             1,167,000
                                                     -------------------
                                                         $   72,977,000
                                                     ===================


The acquisition  was accounted for using the purchase method of accounting.  The
accompanying  condensed consolidated  financial statements,  therefore,  include
only the closing balance sheet of CHD Meridian as of March 31, 2004.

The Company  incurred  acquisition  costs of $1,169,000 that are included in the
purchase  price.  In  addition,  $832,000  of  transaction  related  bonuses and
termination pay are included in the general and  administrative  expense item on
the condensed consolidated statement of operations.


NOTE 4--GOODWILL AND INTANGIBLE ASSETS

The changes in the carrying  amount of goodwill for the quarter  ended March 31,
2004 is as follows:

                                                 Total
                                           ---------------

Balance as of January 1, 2004                 $  8,424,000
Goodwill acquired during the quarter            36,814,000
                                           ---------------
Balance as of March 31, 2004                 $  45,238,000
                                           ===============

                                       12



                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                   (UNAUDITED)

NOTE 4--GOODWILL AND INTANGIBLE ASSETS (continued)

The  components of  identifiable  intangible  assets,  which are included in the
consolidated balance sheet as of March 31, 2004, are as follows:

                                 Gross Carrying   Accumulated     Net Carrying
                                     Amount       Amortization       Amount
                                ---------------  --------------  ---------------
Amortized intangible assets:
    Customer lists               $  36,492,000    $   6,717,000    $  29,775,000
    Other intangibles                5,261,000        2,830,000        2,431,000
                                --------------   --------------  ---------------
Total                            $  41,753,000    $   9,547,000    $  32,206,000
                                ==============   ==============  ===============

Customer lists are amortized on a straight-line  basis over the expected periods
to be benefited,  generally 12 - 15 years.  Other intangible  assets  represents
technology and deferred  marketing costs, which are amortized on a straight-line
basis over the expected periods to be benefited, generally 3 - 5 years.


NOTE 5--CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURE

During the first quarter of 2004,  Palladin  Opportunity  Fund LLC converted the
remaining  balance of the  debenture  payable and accrued  interest  into common
stock.  Accordingly,  the Company  issued 427,106 shares of common stock for the
conversion of principal and accrued interest amounting to $747,000.

Interest expense associated with the convertible  debenture amounted to $368,000
for the three months ended March 31, 2004.  This amount  includes  $362,000 that
represents  the  accretion  to interest  expense  for the  discount of the value
assigned  to the  warrants  issued to the  debenture  holder and the  beneficial
conversion value at date of issuance.


NOTE 6--LONG TERM DEBT

On March 19, 2004, in connection with the CHD Meridian acquisition,  the Company
obtained a $20,000,000  senior  secured credit  facility from a national  lender
that expires on April 1, 2007.  The credit  facility has a $6,000,000  term loan
commitment with a $14,000,000  revolving credit commitment,  which is reduced by
letter of credit liabilities.

The credit facility is secured by substantially  all of the Company's assets. At
any time  prior to June 1,  2004,  the  borrowings  under the  revolving  credit
commitment may not exceed $10,000,000. From June 1, 2004 until November 1, 2005,
the  borrowings  under the  revolving  credit  commitment  may not exceed 80% of
eligible  receivables  plus 50% of eligible  fixed  assets.  Borrowings,  at the
Company's election,  may be either Base rate or Eurodollar rate loans. Base rate
loans bear interest at the prime rate as published from time to time, plus up to
0.75% per  annum  depending  on the  Company's  debt  service  coverage  ratios.
Eurodollar  rate loans bear interest at the Eurodollar  rate plus up to 3.0% per
annum likewise depending on the Company's debt service coverage ratios.

As of March 31,  2004,  the Company had  outstanding  $6,000,000  under the term
loan, $2,000,000 of which is classified as short term and $4,000,000 of which is
classified as long term, and $6,000,000 under the revolving  credit  commitment,
which is classified as long term,  and an aggregate of $3,250,000  under letters
of credit.

                                       13



                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                   (UNAUDITED)

NOTE 6--LONG TERM DEBT (continued)

The credit  facility  includes  certain  financial  covenants  customary for the
amount and  duration  of this  commitment.  As of the date of this  filing,  the
Company was in compliance  with all such  covenants.  The Company is required to
make twelve principal installment payments of $500,000 each quarter beginning on
July 1, 2004.

In addition to funding the merger and related  costs,  a portion of the proceeds
from the credit  facility  was used by the Company to repay  $280,000 in related
party loans and  $944,000 in principal  and  interest for all other  outstanding
promissory notes.


NOTE 7--COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES

Litigation

CHD Meridian is a defendant in two  lawsuits  seeking a return of  approximately
$920,000  in  payments  received in the  ordinary  course of  business  from two
clients that filed for protection  under  bankruptcy  laws during 2002 and 2003.
The  Company  believes  that  amounts  received  are  rightfully  the  Company's
property; however, the outcome of these lawsuits cannot be determined.

CHD Meridian is also  involved in certain  legal actions and claims on a variety
of matters  related to the normal course of business.  Management  believes that
such legal actions will not have a material  effect on the results of operations
or the financial position of the Company.

Healthcare Regulations

The healthcare  industry is subject to numerous laws and regulations of Federal,
state, and local governments.  These laws and regulations  include,  but are not
necessarily  limited to,  matters such as licensure,  accreditation,  government
healthcare  program  participation   requirements,   reimbursement  for  patient
services,  and  Medicare  and  Medicaid  fraud and abuse.  Recently,  government
activity has increased with respect to investigations and allegations concerning
possible  violations of fraud and abuse  statutes and  regulations by healthcare
providers.  Violations of these laws and  regulations  could result in expulsion
from government  healthcare programs together with the imposition of significant
fines and  penalties,  as well as significant  repayments  for patient  services
previously  billed.  Management  believes that the Company is in compliance with
fraud  and  abuse  statutes  as well as  other  applicable  government  laws and
regulations.  Compliance with such laws and regulations can be subject to future
government review and  interpretation  as well as regulatory  actions unknown or
unasserted at this time.

Significant Customers

As of March 31, 2004,  three  customers of CHD Meridian  represented  39% of CHD
Meridian's and the Company's  accounts  receivable as reflected on the Company's
condensed consolidated balance sheets.

For the three months ended March 31, 2004, one customer of the Company accounted
for  33% of the  Company's  revenue  as  reflected  on the  Company's  condensed
consolidated  statement of operations (which exclude any CHD Meridian  revenue).
For the three months ended March 31, 2003, one customer of the Company accounted
for  43% of the  Company's  revenue  as  reflected  on the  Company's  condensed
consolidated statements of operations (which exclude any CHD Meridian revenue).

                                       14



                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                   (UNAUDITED)

NOTE 7--COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (continued)

Significant Customers (continued)

For the three months ended March 31, 2004, one customer of the Company accounted
for 15% of the Company's revenue on a pro forma basis as if the merger had been
effective as of January 1, 2004.

Risk Sharing Contracts

The Company  enters into risk sharing  contracts  with some customers in certain
disease  management  arrangements.  These  contracts  are generally for terms of
three to five years and provide that a percentage of the  Company's  fees may be
refunded  to  the  customer  if  the  Company  does  not  save  the  customer  a
pre-determined  percentage of the expenses  incurred by individuals whose health
is managed by the Company.  As of March 31, 2004, the Company was a party to one
such contract, but no risk revenue was generated during the quarter.


NOTE 8--STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

Preferred Stock

The Company has 2,000,000  authorized shares of preferred stock. As of March 31,
2004,  the  Company  had issued  and  outstanding  1,200,000  shares of Series A
Convertible  Preferred  Stock.  The  Series  A  Convertible  Preferred  Stock is
convertible into common stock at a conversion price of $2.50 per share.  Holders
of Series A  Convertible  Preferred  Stock may  convert  such shares into common
stock at any time.  The Series A Convertible  Preferred  Stock has a liquidation
preference  of $25 per  share  (the  original  purchase  price).  The  Series  A
Convertible  Preferred Stock accrues,  from issuance,  dividends at a rate of 8%
per year on the $25.00 per share  original  issue price.  Dividends will only be
payable upon the Company's liquidation or conversion of the Series A Convertible
Preferred Stock into common stock and will be payable,  at the Company's option,
in cash or common stock.  For the three months ended March 31, 2004, the Company
recorded approximately $79,000 in accrued dividends.

The placement  agents of the Series A Convertible  Preferred  Stock sold to fund
the acquisition of CHD Meridian received a commission of $1,490,000 and warrants
to acquire 492,000 shares of common stock  exercisable at $2.50 per share.  Such
warrants were valued at $1,506,000 utilizing the Black-Scholes  valuation model.
The amount of the cash paid and the value of the warrants  have been  classified
as a cost of equity in the  condensed  consolidated  statement of  stockholders'
equity.

Common Stock

The Company has 100,000,000  authorized  shares of common stock. As of March 31,
2004, the Company had issued and outstanding  24,581,421 shares,  which excludes
3,859,200 shares held in escrow for the CHD Meridian earn out.

Warrants

Under  the terms of a private  placement  completed  during  October  2003,  the
Company filed a  registration  statement  under the  Securities  Act of 1933, as
amended, covering the resale of the common stock and the common stock underlying
warrants issued in the private placement. The Securities and Exchange Commission
declared the registration statement effective on February 17, 2004.

                                       15



                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                   (UNAUDITED)

NOTE 8--STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (continued)

Warrants (continued)

In accordance with EITF 00-19,  "Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments
Indexed To, and Potentially  Settled In a Company's Own Stock," upon issuance of
the warrants,  the Company  recorded a liability in the amount of the fair value
of  $2,459,000  for  warrants to acquire  890,000  shares of common  stock.  The
Company  recorded  an  additional  liability,  with a  corresponding  charge  to
operations, of $301,000 and $350,000 on December 31, 2003 and February 17, 2004,
respectively,  associated  with the increase in fair value of the warrants.  The
warrants  were  accounted for as a liability,  with an  offsetting  reduction to
additional  paid-in  capital  received  in the  private  placement.  The warrant
liability has been reclassified to equity as of February 17, 2004, the effective
date  of  the  registration  statement,   evidencing  the  non-impact  of  these
adjustments on the Company's financial position and business operations.

The fair value of the warrants was estimated using the  Black-Scholes  valuation
model with the following assumptions:  no dividends;  risk-free interest rate of
4%; the  contractual  life of 5 years and  volatility of 112%. The fair value of
the warrants was estimated to be $2,760,000  and $3,110,000 at December 31, 2003
and February 17, 2004, respectively.

The  adjustments  required  by EITF  00-19  were  triggered  by the terms of the
private placement subscription agreement, which imposed penalties if the Company
did not timely  register the common stock  underlying the warrants issued in the
private placement.  The Securities and Exchange  Commission declared the related
registration statement effective within the contractual deadline and the Company
incurred  no  penalties.  The  adjustments  for EITF  00-19 had no impact on the
Company's working capital, liquidity or business operations.

The  following  table  summarizes  the  Company's  activity as it relates to its
warrants for the three months ended March 31, 2004:

                                                  Shares Underlying
                                                       Warrants
                                                  -----------------

  Balance outstanding at January 1, 2004                 3,351,372
  Quarter ended March 31, 2004:
           Granted                                         492,000
           Exercised                                      (179,278)
                                                  -----------------
  Balance outstanding at March 31, 2004                  3,664,094
                                                  =================

Warrants issued during the three months ended March 31, 2004 are exercisable at
$2.50 per share. Such warrants were valued at $1,506,000 and recorded as a cost
of equity because they were granted to placement agents in connection with sales
of convertible preferred stock.

                                       16



                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                   (UNAUDITED)

NOTE 8--STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (continued)

Stock Options

The table below summarizes the activity in the Company's stock option plans for
the quarter ended March 31, 2004:



                                                                                            

                                                   Non-Qualified          Non-Plan
                             Incentive Options        Options          Non-Qualified           Total
                                                                          Options
   ------------------------ -------------------- ------------------- ------------------- -------------------
   Outstanding as of
   January 1, 2004                      652,941             795,973             669,000           2,117,914
   Granted                               70,921                  --                  --              70,921
   Exercised                                 --                  --                  --                  --
   Forfeited/Expired                         --             (30,000)                 --             (30,000)
                            -------------------- ------------------- ------------------- -------------------
   Outstanding as of
   March 31, 2004                       723,862             765,973             669,000           2,158,835
                            ==================== =================== =================== ===================

   Vesting Dates:
         December 31, 2004              172,045             170,998             177,496             520,539
         December 31, 2005              153,618              82,665             101,665             337,948
         December 31, 2006               98,728              50,004              75,006             223,738
         December 31, 2007                5,912                  --                  --               5,912
         December 31, 2008                   --                  --              20,000              20,000
                Thereafter                   --                  --                  --                  --



As of March 31, 2004, an aggregate of 1,050,698 of exercisable plan and non-plan
options, with exercise prices ranging from $.005 to $10.00, were outstanding.

The weighted  average  fair value of options  granted  during the quarter  ended
March 31, 2004 amounted to $4.42.

The Company  accounts  for its employee  incentive  stock option plans using the
intrinsic  value  method in  accordance  with the  recognition  and  measurement
principles of Accounting  Principles Board Opinion No. 25, "Accounting for Stock
Issued  to  Employees,"  as  permitted  by SFAS No.  123.  The  adoption  of the
disclosure  requirements  of SFAS No. 148 did not have a material  effect on the
Company's financial position or results of operations.

                                       17



                          I-TRAX, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
              NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                   (UNAUDITED)

NOTE 8--STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (continued)

Had the Company determined compensation expense based on the fair value at the
grant dates for those awards consistent with the method of SFAS 123, the
Company's net loss per share would have been increased to the following pro
forma amounts:



                                                                                              

                                                               For the three           For the three
                                                                months ended            months ended
                                                               March 31, 2004          March 31, 2003
                                                             --------------------    ------------------

         Net loss as reported                                      $  (2,704,000)        $    (964,000)

         Add back intrinsic value of the options issued to                     
         employee and charged to operations                                   --                    --

         Deduct total stock based employee compensation                        
         expense determined under fair value based methods
         for all awards                                               (3,586,318)             (710,000)
                                                             --------------------    ------------------

         Pro forma net loss                                        $  (6,290,318)       $   (1,674,000)
                                                             ====================    ==================


         Basic and diluted net loss per share as reported          $       (2.41)       $         (.10)

         Pro forma basic and diluted net loss per share            $       (2.64)       $         (.18)



The above pro forma  disclosure  may not be  representative  of the  effects  on
reported net  operations for future years as options vest over several years and
the Company may continue to grant options to employees.

The fair market  value of each option  grant is  estimated  at the date of grant
using the  Black-Scholes  valuation  model with the  following  weighted-average
assumptions:

                           Dividend yield                              0.00%
                           Expected volatility                         112%
                           Risk-free interest rate                     4%
                           Expected life                               5 years

Securities and Exchange Commission Registration

Pursuant  to the terms of the  merger  agreement  between  the  Company  and CHD
Meridian, on April 19, 2004 the Company filed a registration statement under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  covering the resale of (1) the common stock
issued in the merger, (2) the common stock underlying the convertible  preferred
stock issued in the merger and the related  financing,  and (3) the common stock
issuable upon exercise of warrants issued to the placement  agents in connection
with the merger.

NOTE 9--SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

During the first quarter of 2004,  CHD Meridian  formed a Risk  Retention  Group
("RRG")  licensed  in the State of Vermont for the  purposes of self  insuring a
portion of the merged companies'  professional and general liability  insurance.
RRG was capitalized  with  $2,000,000 in cash and a $1,000,000  letter of credit
under the Company's  credit  facility.  RRG expects to begin issuing policies to
the Company in May 2004.

                                       18



Item 2. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results 
of Operations

         The following Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operations of I-trax, Inc. and its subsidiaries should
be reviewed in conjunction with our financial statements and related notes
appearing on the preceding pages as well as our audited financial statements and
related notes incorporated in our Annual Report on Form 10-KSB for the fiscal
year ended December 31, 2003.

         I-trax is a combination of two companies that merged on March 19, 2004:
I-trax, Inc. and Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc., which does
business as CHD Meridian Healthcare. Accordingly, this quarterly report on Form
10-QSB describes the business of the merged companies. Nonetheless, for
accounting purposes, the consolidation of results of operations of the two
constituent companies was effective April 1, 2004. As a result, the results for
the three months ended March 31, 2004 do not include the operations of CHD
Meridian Healthcare and, therefore, are not indicative of the results to be
expected for subsequent quarters or the fiscal year ending December 31, 2004.
The financial statements included herein and discussed below do, however,
include the combined balance sheets of both companies.

         The following discussion also contains forward-looking statements,
which are based upon current expectations and involve a number of risks and
uncertainties. In order for I-trax to utilize the "safe harbor" provisions of
the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, investors are hereby
cautioned that these statements may be affected by important factors, which are
set forth below and in our Annual Report on Form 10-KSB for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2003, and consequently, actual operations and results may
differ materially from those expressed in such forward-looking statements. The
most important of these factors is our ability successfully to integrate our
operations and health management programs with the operations and services of
CHD Meridian Healthcare and successfully introduce to our marketplace our
combined products and services.

         The accompanying unaudited financial statements have been prepared in
accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of
America for interim financial information, the instructions to Form 10-QSB and
Item 310(b) of Regulation S-B. In our opinion, the unaudited financial
statements have been prepared on the same basis as the annual financial
statements and reflect all adjustments necessary to present fairly the financial
position as of March 31, 2004 and the results of the operations and cash flows
for the three months ended March 31, 2004. The preparation of these financial
statements requires us to make estimates and judgments that affect the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities and the reported amounts of revenues and
expenses during the covered periods. We base our estimates and judgments on our
historical experience and on various other factors that we believe are
reasonable under the circumstances. We evaluate our estimates and judgments,
including those related to revenue recognition, bad debts, and goodwill and
other intangible assets on an ongoing basis. Notwithstanding these efforts,
there can be no assurance that actual results will not differ from the
respective amount of those estimates.

I-trax and CHD Meridian Healthcare Business Description

         As a merged company, we offer two categories of services, which can be
integrated or blended as necessary or appropriate based on each client's needs.
The first category includes on site services such as occupational health,
primary care, corporate health and pharmacy, which were historically offered by
CHD Meridian Healthcare. The second category includes personalized health
management programs, which were historically offered by I-trax. Each of these
services is described in greater detail below.

         As the result of the merger, we are the nation's largest provider of
corporate health management services. Our health management services are
designed to allow employers to contract directly for a wide range of employee
healthcare needs. We can deliver these services at or near the client's work
site by opening, staffing and managing a clinic or pharmacy dedicated to the
client and its employees, or remotely by using the Internet and our
state-of-the-art Care Communications Center staffed with trained nurses and
other healthcare professionals 24 hours per day, 7 days per week. Our array of
services provides each client with flexibility to meet its specific pharmacy,
primary care, occupational health, corporate health, wellness, lifestyle
management or disease management needs. Pursuant to multi-year agreements, our
clients can offer their employees, dependents and retirees any combination of
our 

                                       19



various services which integrate seamlessly, through on-site or off-site
delivery platforms, or as a component of or complement to existing health plan
options.

         Our primary target market is large and mid-sized self-insured employers
and business consortia. These entities are more likely to derive immediate and
meaningful financial benefit from our services because of their scale and focus
on controlling healthcare costs.

         We currently operate approximately 160 locations in 32 states. We also
maintain contracts with approximately 150 clients, including many leading
employers. Our clients pay us directly for our services and include automotive
and automotive parts manufacturers, consumer products manufacturers, large
financial institutions, health plans, integrated delivery networks, and third
party administrators. Our client retention rate is high because we establish
strong client relationships, which are supported by the critical nature of our
services, the benefits achieved by employer and employee constituents, and the
utilization of multi-year service contracts.

         CHD Meridian  Healthcare's Historic Business - Services Delivered At or
Near the Work Site

         Occupational Health Services. We provide professional staffing and
management of on-site health facilities that address the occupational health,
workers' compensation injuries, and minor illness needs of the employer's
workforce. These programs are designed to operate across the entire array of
occupational health regulatory environments and emphasize work-related injury
cost-reduction, treatment, medical surveillance or testing, disability
management, case management, return-to-work coordination, medical community
relations or oversight, on-site physical therapy, injury prevention, and
ergonomic assessment and intervention. Our health programs improve compliance
with treatment protocols and drug formularies, enhance employee productivity,
and allow for greater employer control of occupational health costs. We
currently operate 77 occupational health facilities.

         Primary Care Services. We operate employer-sponsored health centers
designed to integrate with the employer's existing healthcare plans. In such
arrangements, employers contract with us directly for primary care health
services and in the process regain control of costs, quality and access. Each
health center generally services a single employer and offers health management
programs addressing the primary care needs of the employee base, including
optometry services and limited prevention and disease management programs. A
significant number of our clients also combines our health centers with a
dedicated pharmacy. We also offer customized solutions by establishing and
managing healthcare provider networks and absence management, including non-work
related case management and disability management. Our physicians, nurses, and
other staff are dedicated to the customer's employee population, allowing
employees, retirees, and their dependents to receive cost-effective, high
quality, accessible and convenient care. We currently operate 17 primary care
centers.

         Pharmacy Services. We operate employer-sponsored pharmacies that offer
prescription services exclusively to the client's covered population. By
leveraging prescription volume across our client base and procuring
pharmaceuticals as a captive class of trade, we purchase products at
considerable savings for our clients, thus significantly and positively
affecting what we understand is one of our clients' fastest-growing healthcare
cost categories. Our pharmacy services also use sophisticated information
technologies. These technologies may be integrated with each client's existing
pharmacy management programs and plans, and improve employees' prescription
fulfillment convenience. We currently operate 24 pharmacies, including those
operating in conjunction with our primary care centers.

         Corporate Health Services. We offer non-industrial clients that do not
experience significant physical injury rates, but that nonetheless maintain
large workforces that require general and specialized medical services, custom
designed workplace programs that combine preventative care, occupational health,
medical surveillance or testing, travel medicine and health education. Clients
for which we provide corporate health services include financial service,
advertising and consulting firms. We currently operate 47 corporate healthcare
facilities.

         I-trax's Historic Business - The Health-e-LifeSM Program

         We enable individuals to obtain better healthcare through our
personalized Health-e-LifeSM Program. The program is designed to deliver
lifestyle and wellness management, and disease and risk reduction interventions
to a 

                                       20



client's entire population, across multiple locations and irrespective of
population size, by using predictive science, sophisticated proprietary computer
software, clinical expertise, and personal care coordination. We currently have
approximately 37 clients, which include self-insured employers, health plans,
and integrated delivery networks, using various components of our
Health-e-LifeSM Program. Self-insured employers, health plans, hospital and
health systems, and governmental agencies continue to be prime consumers of
lifestyle and wellness management, and disease and risk reduction programs, and
we are actively marketing to these potential clients.

         We believe the Health-e-LifeSM Program enables our clients to evolve
from fragmented care management practices into a cohesive and efficient system
of healthcare. The Health-e-LifeSM Program is fully integrated, uses a
single-data platform that allows all caregivers to share records, and enables
our clients to provide true coordination of care. We believe that by
facilitating real-time secure communication between our client, the patient, the
doctor, the care coordinator and the insurer within today's complex healthcare
system, the Health-e-LifeSM Program reduces costs and enables improved delivery
of care.

         Predictive Science. Our Health-e-LifeSM Program incorporates predictive
science to analyze our clients' medical claims and pharmacy and clinical data to
predict future healthcare costs. We believe this is an essential step to
effective disease and lifestyle management. Experts agree that predictive
science provides a comprehensive advantage to health plans, employers and
providers, and leads to cost effective medical management and greater
profitability for the ultimate payor. Using predictive science, we analyze our
clients' entire populations to predict our clients' future healthcare costs,
including avoidable costs, the health conditions that will drive those costs and
the people within our clients' populations who are at risk for those conditions.
Armed with this information, we target our resources to achieve for each client
the best value for the amount the client will invest in providing healthcare
and, consequently, savings.

         Technology Solutions. All technology components of our Health-e-LifeSM
Program use a single data platform--Medicive(R) Medical Enterprise Data
System--a proprietary software architecture developed to collect, store, sort,
retrieve and analyze a broad range of information used in the healthcare
industry.

         Furthermore, our web accessible software includes portals for key
stakeholders in the care delivery process--consumers, physicians and care
managers--and permit real-time sharing of information and support the adherence
to our health and disease intervention programs. The key technology we use for
effective care coordination include:

         o        Health-e-Coordinator(TM), a web-based care management
                  application;

         o        MyFamilyMD(TM), a consumer health management portal;

         o        CarePrime(R),  a clinical care  application for physicians and
                  clinicians; and

         o        I-talk(TM), interactive smart voice technology.

         Interventions and Clinical Expertise. The Health-e-LifeSM Program
includes personalized health and disease interventions for individuals who
suffer from, or are at high risk for, active or chronic disease and tailored
programs for individuals who are at low risk. Depending on the individual's
level of risk, our custom tailored interventions include self-help programs
available through the web or person-assisted programs administered through our
Care Communications Center. All interventions include lifestyle and risk
reduction programs that follow evidence-based clinical guidelines to optimize
health, fitness, productivity and quality of life.

         The Health-e-LifeSM Program currently includes interventions for a
number of specific chronic conditions, including congestive heart failure,
coronary artery disease, asthma, diabetes, cancer management, cystic fibrosis,
lower back pain, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

         Care Communications Center. A vital component of our program is our
Care Communications Center, which is staffed with trained nurses and other
healthcare professionals 24 hours per day, 7 days per week. Through the Care
Communications Center, we effect targeted interventions to improve the health
management of the populations we serve. The Care Communications Center helps
each member or employee of our client make 

                                       21



informed decisions about his or her health and provides ongoing support for
those with chronic diseases. Our demand management and nurse triage services
incorporate nationally recognized, evidence-based clinical guidelines to
increase compliance by caregivers and consumers with best practices.

         I-trax and CHD Meridian Healthcare Joint Market Opportunity

         To change the health status of a defined population and manage the
upward claim trend experienced by employers and employees, self-insured
employers are seeking programs that promote health, manage disease and
disability and complement existing health initiatives and benefits. Self-insured
employers invest in such health programs because they reduce later need for
critical care and related costs, maximize health, increase productivity, reduce
absenteeism, improve health status of both active employees and retirees, and
reduce overall costs.

         We believe that I-trax and CHD Meridian Healthcare offer a complete
solution to meet this need. We service each segment of a self-insured employer's
population and achieve the desired clinical and financial outcomes. CHD Meridian
Healthcare is the leader in on-site healthcare for Fortune 1,000 companies. Its
programs reduce healthcare costs of the defined population it serves.
Complementing the CHD Meridian Healthcare services, I-trax's personalized health
management solutions for focused disease and lifestyle/wellness management
improve the health of the entire population, achieving the same result. The
service offering of the merged companies responds to a specific and frequent
request of large employers, including many historic CHD Meridian Healthcare
clients, for the most comprehensive range of health management services.

         We also believe that with a nominal increase in variable costs, the
merged companies can offer to CHD Meridian Healthcare's historic clients the
value added benefit of our Health-e-LifeSM Program and, with respect to certain
of these clients, can successfully negotiate participation in future medical
cost savings that may result from the merged companies' services.

         Put more specifically, we currently serve approximately 650,000 lives
through our on-site clinics, which represent only approximately 25% of our
clients' employees, dependents and retirees. We charge these clients for our
services on a "cost plus" basis to manage these lives. We believe that the
merged companies' suite of products will allow us several opportunities with
respect to those of our clients that elect to expand their relationship with us.
These include:

         o        Because our services now encompass on-site facilities, which
                  offer high quality, better access and lower costs, and
                  Internet and telephone care delivery capabilities, we have
                  access to a larger portion of our clients' populations, which
                  affords us an opportunity to expand substantially our services
                  within our existing client base.

         o        We price our population-based service on a "per member per
                  month" basis. This model enables us to direct resources to
                  those of our clients' employees, dependents and retirees that
                  represent the greatest potential future costs. Because in
                  certain instances we participate in savings our programs
                  generate, when properly deployed in new business
                  opportunities, management believes the merged companies' suite
                  of products will afford us increasing gross margin
                  opportunities for incremental, integrated business.

         o        We are one vendor for predictive modeling, primary care,
                  pharmacy, occupational health, lifestyle and wellness
                  management, and disease management, and as such our inherent
                  efficiency leads to savings.

         o        Our combined services offer multiple entry points for employer
                  customers to meet their budget restrictions and specific
                  needs. This available menu of services could shorten our
                  current sales cycle and provide us with an opportunity to
                  build a more comprehensive program as the relationship grows
                  with each client over time.

                                       22



         I-trax and CHD Meridian Healthcare - Risks Inherent in Our Business

         As we pursue the opportunities outlined above, we face numerous and
significant challenges specific to our company and the healthcare industry in
general. Challenges specific to our company include:

         o        Our ability to integrate I-trax and CHD Meridian Healthcare,
                  which prior to the merger operated independently and focused
                  on different delivery methods within the corporate health
                  management solutions market. If we are not able to integrate
                  successfully, we are not going to realize the benefits we
                  anticipate from selling our combined services.

         o        The long and complex sales cycle inherent in our business. If
                  we cannot shorten the sales cycle for our services, we will
                  not realize the benefit of quick revenue growth.

         o        Increasing competition in our industry. We are competing with
                  numerous companies offering services that may be construed as
                  similar to ours. Such additional competition could reduce the
                  number of new clients we obtain and could cause us to reduce
                  our pricing and, consequently, our gross margins.

         o        We may not succeed in deploying the merged companies' combined
                  services. If we do not, we will not realize the growth in
                  revenue we anticipate from the merger.

         Challenges specific to our industry include:

         o        In recent years, healthcare costs have grown significantly and
                  as a result the healthcare industry is under significant price
                  pressure. Although this has increased interest in our services
                  as they are designed to contain costs, we are nonetheless
                  subject to this general trend. It is conceivable that new and
                  potential clients will continue to pressure us to reduce our
                  prices and if we do, our revenues growth will slow and our
                  gross margins will decrease.

         o        We are subject to extensive state and Federal regulation,
                  which grows more complex each year. As such, compliance
                  efforts have also increased in complexity. We may need
                  additional resources to incur compliance, which will increase
                  our expenses and decrease our gross margins.

Corporate Overview; Acquisition of CHD Meridian Healthcare

         I-trax was incorporated in Delaware on September 15, 2000 at the
direction of the board of directors of I-trax Health Management Solutions, Inc.,
or Health Management, I-trax's then parent company. On February 5, 2001, I-trax
became the holding company of Health Management at the closing of a
re-organization. The holding company structure has allowed us greater
flexibility in our operations as well as expansion and diversification plans,
including the acquisition of CHD Meridian Healthcare and WellComm Group, Inc.

         On March 19, 2004 we finalized the acquisition of CHD Meridian
Healthcare pursuant to a merger agreement dated as of December 26, 2003, as
amended, by and among CHD Meridian Healthcare, I-trax and two I-trax
subsidiaries. Under the merger agreement, we delivered to CHD Meridian
Healthcare stockholders 10,000,000 shares of I-trax common stock, 400,000 shares
of I-trax Series A Convertible Preferred Stock, each of which is convertible
into 10 shares of I-trax common stock, and paid $25,508,000 in cash. Immediately
prior to the merger, CHD Meridian Healthcare also redeemed certain of its then
outstanding shares of common stock and options to purchase common stock for
which it paid approximately $9,492,000 in the aggregate. Further, if CHD
Meridian Healthcare, continuing its operations following the closing of the
merger as a subsidiary of I-trax, achieves calendar 2004 milestones for earnings
before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA, additional
common shares will be payable as follows: If EBITDA equals or exceeds $8.1
million, the number of such additional I-trax common shares payable will be
3,473,280; the number of such shares increases proportionately up to a maximum
of 3,859,200 such additional I-trax common shares if EBITDA equals or exceeds
$9.0 million. Any escrowed shares 

                                       23



that are not released will be returned to I-trax for cancellation. Further, the
escrowed shares are not deemed outstanding for accounting purposes until
released.

         Immediately following the closing of the merger, I-trax redeemed from
former CHD Meridian Healthcare stockholders that participated in the merger, pro
rata, an aggregate of 200,000 shares of Series A Convertible Preferred Stock at
their original issue price of $25 per share.

         We obtained the cash portion of the merger consideration by selling
1,000,000 shares of Series A Convertible Preferred Stock at a purchase price of
$25.00 per share for gross proceeds of $25,000,000 and by borrowing $12 million
on a new $20 million senior secured debt facility from a national lender.

         In connection with the sale and issuance of Series A Convertible
Preferred Stock, we reported $15,820,000 as a dividend to preferred stockholders
representing the beneficial conversion value for the underlying common stock.
The beneficial conversion value is the benefit realized by the preferred
stockholder and is treated as a dividend on the convertible preferred stock
solely for the purpose of computing earnings per share. The dividend is computed
by multiplying (1) the difference between the market value of the underlying
common stock calculated using average closing price for the three days prior and
three days after the announcement of the merger ($3.63 per share) and the
conversion price ($2.50 per share) by (2) the number of shares of common stock
into which the convertible preferred stock outstanding at the merger's effective
time was convertible (14,000,000 shares).

         The estimated purchase price we paid for CHD Meridian Healthcare,
valuing our common stock at $3.63 per share as of March 19, 2004, the date of
acquisition, and before the issuance of any of the earn-out shares, is
approximately $72,977,000, including $1,169,000 in transaction costs recorded as
goodwill. The acquisition was accounted for as a purchase. As such, the purchase
price has been preliminarily allocated to the estimated fair values of the
assets acquired and liabilities assumed. If the escrow shares are paid to former
CHD Meridian Healthcare in accordance with the terms of the merger agreement,
the purchase price of the acquisition will increase, and the additional purchase
price will also be allocated to the estimated fair values of the assets acquired
and liabilities assumed. We have obtained an independent third-party preliminary
valuation of the acquired intangible assets.

Key Trends and Analytical Points

         The following is a summary of key trends and analytical points covered
in greater detail in management's discussion and analysis:

         o        CHD Meridian Healthcare Acquisition: On March 19, 2004, we
                  finalized the acquisition of CHD Meridian Healthcare. We will
                  commence reporting financial results that include CHD Meridian
                  Healthcare operations beginning as of April 1, 2004. When we
                  begin to report CHD Meridian Healthcare revenue, operational
                  expenses, general and administration expenses, depreciation
                  and amortization expenses and interest expense will also
                  increase.

         o        Revenue: Revenue decreased modestly from the quarter ended
                  March 31, 2003 to the quarter ended March 31, 2004 as we shift
                  our sales to population health management solutions from
                  technology sales. In accordance with management's expectation,
                  we continued to increase our service revenue and decrease our
                  technology revenue.

         o        Operating Expenses: Operating expenses increased from the
                  quarter ended March 31, 2003 to the quarter ended March 31,
                  2004, reflecting added costs associated with delivering our
                  population health management solutions.

         o        General and Administrative Expenses. General and
                  administrative expenses increased substantially from the
                  quarter ended March 31, 2003 to the quarter ended March 31,
                  2004. The increase represents bonus payments and termination
                  pay associated with the CHD Meridian Healthcare merger.

                                       24



         o        Other Income and Expenses: Interest expense and financing
                  costs increased from the quarter ended March 31, 2003 to the
                  quarter ended March 31, 2004.

         o        Working Capital: We finished the quarter ended March 31, 2004,
                  with working capital of $4,492,000. We believe that we have
                  access to sufficient working capital to run our business and
                  continue to expand our client base.

I-trax Results of Operations

         The following discussion of results of operations is limited to the
historical business of I-trax in effect as of March 31, 2004. We will commence
reporting financial results that include CHD Meridian Healthcare operations
beginning as of April 1, 2004. When we begin to report CHD Meridian Healthcare
revenue, operational expenses, general and administration expenses, depreciation
and amortization expenses and interest expense will also increase.

         Three Months ended March 31, 2004 Compared to Three Months ended March
31, 2003

         Revenue for the three months ended March 31, 2004 was $1,447,000, a
decrease of $169,000 or 10% from $1,616,000 for the three months ended March 31,
2003. The decrease is directly related to a change in our business model from
technology sales to total population health management solutions. Technology
revenue decreased from $915,000 for the three months ended March 31, 2003 to
approximately $500,000 for the three months ended March 31, 2004, but the
decrease was partially offset by a service revenue increase from $701,000 for
the three months ended March 31, 2003 to $947,000 for the three months ended
March 31, 2004.

         Operating expenses, which represent our call center costs, amounted to
$697,000 for the three months ended March 31, 2004, an increase of $136,000 or
24% from $561,000 for the three months ended March 31, 2003. The increase is
primarily attributable to the ramp-up of personnel required to service our
prevention and care services contracts.

         General and administrative expenses, which represent our corporate
costs, increased from $1,004,000 for the three months ended March 31, 2003 to
$2,021,000 for the three months ended March 31, 2004. The increase of $1,017,000
is primarily attributable to expenses related to the CHD Meridian Healthcare
acquisition, including approximately $498,000 for bonuses granted to certain
individuals instrumental in completing the CHD Meridian Healthcare acquisition
and a one-time charge of approximately $334,000 for termination pay associated
with two departing executives. The balance of the increase of $185,000 includes
general corporate expenses comprised of professional fees, exchange listing and
investor relations fees and costs associated with business development travel.

         Depreciation and amortization expenses were $435,000 for the three
months ended March 31, 2004, as compared to $437,000 for the three months ended
March 31, 2003.

         Interest expense for the three months ended March 31, 2004 was
$613,000, representing an increase of $292,000 or 91% from $321,000 for the
three months ended March 31, 2003. For the three months ended March 31, 2004,
interest expense includes a charge of $573,000 attributable to the unamortized
portion of the discount and beneficial conversion value associated with the
convertible debenture and certain other promissory notes. The discount amount is
expensed because the convertible debenture was converted into common stock and
the promissory notes were repaid during March 2004.

         Amortization of financing costs for the three months ended March 31,
2004 was $35,000 representing a decrease of $22,000 or 39% from $57,000 for the
three months ended March 31, 2003. As of March 31, 2004, these financing costs
are fully amortized.

         Other expense for the three months ended March 31, 2004, represents a
one-time non-cash charge of $350,000 associated with the warrants to acquire
common stock issued in a private placement completed during October 2003. The
charge represents the increase in the value of the common stock underlying the
warrants up until the effective time of a registration statement we filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission to register the underlying shares. The
initial value of the warrants was recorded as a liability and any fluctuation in
the value was passed through the statement of operations. Once the registration
became effective, any balance in the liability 

                                       25



account was reclassified to equity. The registration became effective during
February 2004, and accordingly, we reclassified $3,110,000 of liability into
equity. Other expense for the three months ended March 31, 2003, reflects a
charge of $200,000 in connection with the termination in January 2003 of our
agreement to acquire DxCG, Inc., a Boston-based predictive modeling company.
This sum was paid to DxCG following DxCG's termination of the merger agreement
because certain conditions to closing, including third party financing for the
cash portion of the purchase price, were not satisfied.

         For the three months ended March 31, 2004, our net loss was $2,704,000,
as compared to a net loss of $964,000 for the three months ended March 31, 2003.
Net loss for the three months ended March 31, 2004, however, includes non-cash
and merger related expenses of $1,755,000, comprised of: (1) $573,000 in
non-cash interest expense attributable to the unamortized discount and
beneficial conversion value of a previously outstanding convertible debenture
and certain other promissory notes which were converted into common stock in
March 2004; (2) $350,000 of non-cash charges related to an increase in the fair
market value of common stock underlying warrants issued in a private placement
completed during October 2003; and (3) $832,000 of merger related costs, which
were included in general and administrative expense.

I-trax and CHD Meridian Healthcare Pro Forma Results of Operations

         The following are our unaudited pro forma results of operations giving
effect to the acquisition of CHD Meridian Healthcare as though the transaction
had occurred on January 1, 2003, excluding transaction costs of $1,938,000 and
$832,000 included in the CHD Meridian Healthcare and I-trax statements of
operations, respectively.

                                      Three months          Three months
                                          ended                 ended
                                     March 31, 2004        March 31, 2003
                                    ------------------    ------------------

         Net revenue                    $  24,802,000         $  23,824,000
                                    ------------------    ------------------

         Operating income                    (264,000)              573,000
                                    ------------------    ------------------

         Net loss                       $  (1,413,000)         $   (349,000)
                                    ==================    ==================

         Loss per common share            $      (.06)          $      (.02)
                                    ==================    ==================

Liquidity and Capital Resources

         Working Capital

         As of March 31, 2004, we had working capital of $4,492,000. We believe
that we have sufficient working capital to run our business and continue to
expand our client base.

         On March 19, 2004, in connection with the CHD Meridian Healthcare
acquisition, we obtained a $20,000,000 senior secured credit facility from a
national lender that expires on April 1, 2007. The credit facility has a
$6,000,000 term loan commitment with a $14,000,000 revolving credit commitment,
which is reduced by letter of credit liabilities.

         The credit facility is secured by substantially all of our assets. At
any time prior to June 1, 2004, the borrowings under the revolving credit
commitment may not exceed $10,000,000. From June 1, 2004 until November 1, 2005,
the borrowings under the revolving credit commitment may not exceed 80% of
eligible receivables plus 50% of eligible fixed assets. Borrowings, at our
election, may be either Base rate or Eurodollar rate loans. Base rate loans bear
interest at the prime rate as published from time to time, plus up to 0.75% per
annum depending on our debt service coverage ratios. Eurodollar rate loans bear
interest at the Eurodollar rate plus up to 3.0% per annum likewise depending on
our debt service coverage ratios.

                                       26



         As of March 31, 2004, we had outstanding $6,000,000 under the term
loan, $2,000,000 of which is classified as short term and $4,000,000 of which is
classified as long term, and $6,000,000 under the revolving credit commitment,
which is classified as long term, and an aggregate of $3,250,000 under letters
of credit. We are required to make twelve principal installment payments of
$500,000 each quarter beginning on July 1, 2004.

         The credit facility includes certain financial covenants customary for
the amount and duration of this commitment. As of the date of this filing, we
were in compliance with all such covenants.

         Sources and Uses of Cash

         Cash used for operations was $1,756,000 and $576,000 for the three
months ended March 31, 2004 and March 31, 2003, respectively. This increase in
use of cash for operations is partially the result of the increase in accounts
receivable related to a single customer. The full balance owed by such customer
was collected in April 2004. Effective April 1, 2004, with the inclusion of CHD
Meridian Healthcare's operations, we expect to generate positive cash flows from
operations.

         During the three months ended March 31, 2004, we received funds from
selling 1,000,000 shares of Series A Convertible Preferred Stock for
$25,000,000, before commission expenses and other transaction costs, which
amounted to approximately $2,575,000 in the aggregate. We also received funds
from borrowings of $12,000,000 from our newly established senior secured credit
facility with a national lender. These funds were primarily used to fund
$30,508,000 required for the cash portion of the CHD Meridian Healthcare
acquisition, including the $5,000,000 redemption of preferred stock issued
directly to the CHD Meridian Healthcare stockholders and for working capital.

         In addition to funding the merger and related costs, we used a portion
of the proceeds from the credit facility to repay $280,000 in related party
loans and $944,000 in principal and interest for all other outstanding
promissory notes.

         During the first quarter of 2004, Palladin Opportunity Fund LLC
converted the remaining balance of the debenture payable and accrued interest
into common stock. Accordingly, the Company issued 427,106 shares of common
stock for the conversion of principal and accrued interest amounting to
$747,000.

         Material Commitments

         The following schedule summarizes the contractual lease obligations of
I-trax and CHD Meridian Healthcare by the indicated period as of December 31,
2003:

For the year ending           I-trax          CHD Meridian           Total
December 31:                                   Healthcare
------------------------- ----------------   ---------------     --------------

         2004                 $   206,000      $  1,217,000       $  1,423,000
         2005                     119,000           909,000          1,028,000
         2006                      56,000           850,000            906,000
         2007                      24,000           735,000            759,000
         2008                          --           651,000            651,000
         Thereafter                    --           574,000            574,000
                          ----------------   ---------------     --------------
Total future payments         $   405,000      $  4,936,000       $  5,341,000
                          ================   ===============     ==============

                                       27



Critical Accounting Policies

         The following critical accounting policies concern the business of
I-trax at March 31, 2004. The policies will be reassessed effective as of April
1, 2004 when we begin to report revenue, expenses and other financial
information concerning CHD Meridian Healthcare.

         Impairment of Goodwill and Intangible Assets

         We operate in an industry that is rapidly evolving and extremely
competitive. It is reasonably possible that our accounting estimates, with
respect to the useful life and ultimate recoverability of our carrying basis of
goodwill and intangible assets, could change in the near term and that the
effect of such changes on the financial statements could be material.

         Revenue Recognition

         Technology Revenue. We derive our revenue pursuant to different
contract types, including perpetual software licenses, subscription licenses and
custom development services, all of which may include support services revenue
such as licensed software maintenance, training, consulting and web hosting
arrangements. As described below, significant management judgments and estimates
must be made and used in connection with the revenue recognized in any
accounting period. Material differences may result in the amount and timing of
our revenue for any period if our management made different judgments or
utilized different estimates.

         We license our software products for a specific term or on a perpetual
basis. Most of our license contracts also require maintenance and support. We
apply the provisions of Statement of Position 97-2, "Software Revenue
Recognition," as amended by Statement of Position 98-9 "Modification of SOP
97-2, Software Revenue Recognition, With Respect to Certain Transactions" to all
transactions involving the sale of software products and hardware transactions
where the software is not incidental. For hardware transactions where software
is not incidental, we do not unbundle our fee and, accordingly, do not apply
separate accounting guidance to the hardware and software elements. For hardware
transactions where software is not involved, we apply the provisions of Staff
Accounting Bulletin 101 "Revenue Recognition." In addition, we apply the
provisions of Emerging Issues Task Force Issue No. 00-03 "Application of AICPA
Statement of Position 97-2 to Arrangements that Include the Right to Use
Software Stored on Another Entity's Hardware" to our hosted software service
transactions.

         We recognize revenue from the sale of software licenses when persuasive
evidence of an arrangement exists, the product has been delivered, the fee is
fixed and determinable, and collection of the resulting receivable is reasonably
assured. Delivery generally occurs when the product is delivered to a common
carrier.

         We assess collection based on a number of factors, including past
transaction history with the customer and the creditworthiness of the customer.
We do not request collateral from our customers. If we determine that collection
of a fee is not reasonably assured, we defer the fee and recognize revenue at
the time collection becomes reasonably assured, which is generally upon receipt
of cash.

         For technology arrangements with multiple obligations (for example,
undelivered software maintenance and support), we allocate revenue to each
component of the arrangement using the residual value method based on the fair
value of the undelivered elements. Accordingly, we defer technology revenue in
the amount equivalent to the fair value of the undelivered elements.

         We recognize revenue for maintenance services ratably over the contract
term. Our training and consulting services are billed based on hourly rates, and
we generally recognize revenue as these services are performed. However, upon
execution of a contract, we determine whether or not any services included
within the arrangement require us to perform significant work either to alter
the underlying software or to build additional complex interfaces so that the
software performs as the customer requests. If these services are included as
part of an arrangement, we recognize the fee using the percentage of completion
method. We determine the percentage of completion based on our estimate of costs
incurred to date compared with the total costs budgeted to complete the project.

                                       28



         Services Revenue. We recognize service revenue as services are
rendered. We contract with our customers to provide services based on an agreed
upon monthly fee, a per-call charge or a combination of both.

         Upon execution of a contract for services, we assess whether the fee
associated with our revenue transactions is fixed and determinable and whether
or not collection is reasonably assured. We assess whether the fee is fixed and
determinable based on the payment terms associated with such contract. If a
significant portion of a fee is due after our normal payment terms, which are
generally 30 to 90 days from invoice date, we account for such fee as services
are provided.

         We also enter into risk-sharing contracts. These contracts are
generally for a term of three to five years, provide for automatic renewal, and
may provide that a percentage of our fee is refundable ("performance based")
based on achieving a targeted percentage reduction in a customer's healthcare
costs.

Material Equity Transactions

         In the quarter ended March 31, 2004, we executed equity transactions
with unrelated parties in connection with the CHD Meridian Healthcare merger and
related financing. We believe that we have valued all such transactions pursuant
to the various accounting rules and that they ultimately represent the economic
substance of each transaction. Please refer to "Management's Discussion and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations - Corporate Overview;
Acquisition of CHD Meridian Healthcare," "Liquidity and Capital Resources -
Sources and Uses of Cash" and Part II, "Item 2-Changes in Securities."

                                       29



Supplemental Disclosure of Consolidated Financial Statements of Meridian
Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc. and Subsidiaries for the Quarters ended
March 31, 2004 and 2003

         Introductory Note

         On March 19, 2004, Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc.
("Meridian") was acquired by I-trax, Inc. based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
The effective date of the transaction for purposes of consolidating the results
of operations of the two companies was April 1, 2004. However, the balance sheet
for Meridian was combined with the consolidated financial statements of I-trax
for the period ended March 31, 2004. The merger and its terms are described
above in Note 3 - Business Combination to the Condensed Consolidated Financial
Statements of I-trax and in I-trax's Management's Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations. We are now presenting below
Meridian's "stand alone" consolidated financial statements of operations and
cash flows for the quarters ended March 31, 2004 and 2003 to supplement other
disclosure made in this report.


                Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc.
                and Subsidiaries (d/b/a CHD Meridian Healthcare)
                                   (Unaudited)

                        Consolidated Financial Statements

                     Quarters ended March 31, 2004 and 2003


                                    Contents

Consolidated Financial Statements


Consolidated Statements of Operations........................................31
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows........................................32
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements...................................33

                                       30



                Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc.
                and Subsidiaries (d/b/a CHD Meridian Healthcare)
                                   (Unaudited)
                      Consolidated Statements of Operations
                                 (in thousands)



                                                                                              

                                                                         Quarter ended    Quarter ended
                                                                           March 31,        March 31,
                                                                              2004             2003
                                                                        -----------------------------------

          Net revenues                                                    $    23,355      $     22,208

          Costs and expenses:
              Operating expenses                                               18,028            17,072
              General and administrative expenses                               5,832             3,360
              Depreciation and amortization                                       388               382
                                                                        -----------------------------------
          Total costs and expenses                                             24,248            20,814
                                                                        -----------------------------------

          Operating income                                                       (893)            1,394

          Other (income) expense:
              Interest, net                                                       (29)              (23)
                                                                        -----------------------------------
          Total other (income) expense                                            (29)              (23)
                                                                        -----------------------------------

          Income from continuing operations before income taxes                  (864)            1,417

          Provision for income taxes                                               --               187
                                                                        -----------------------------------

                                                                        -----------------------------------
          Net income (loss)                                               $      (864)     $      1,230
                                                                        ===================================



See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements(unaudited).

                                       31





                                                                                               

                Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc.
                and Subsidiaries (d/b/a CHD Meridian Healthcare)
                                   (Unaudited)
                      Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
                        (in thousands, except share data)

                                                                            For the Three   For the Three
                                                                             Months Ended    Months Ended
                                                                              March 31,       March 31,
                                                                           ---------------------------------
                                                                                 2004            2003
                                                                           ---------------------------------
        Operating activities
        Net income from continuing operations                                  $    (864)        $ 1,230
        Adjustments to reconcile net income from continuing operations to
           net cash provided by operating activities:
           Depreciation and amortization                                             388             382
           Loss on disposal of fixed assets                                            -               -
           Changes in operating assets and liabilities, net of effects of
             acquisitions:
               Accounts receivable                                                 4,510           2,992
               Other current assets                                                  846             (20)
               Accounts payable                                                      367          (1,030)
               Other accruals and liabilities                                     (1,845)         (1,681)
               Other long-term liabilities                                          (150)            (82)
                                                                           ---------------------------------
        Net cash provided by operating activities                                  3,252           1,791
                                                                           ---------------------------------

        Investing activities
        Purchase of property and equipment, net                                     (506)           (208)
        Increase in intangible assets                                                (68)              -
        Cash paid for acquisitions                                                     -               -
                                                                           ---------------------------------
        Net cash used in investing activities                                       (574)         (1,309)
                                                                           ---------------------------------

        Financing activities
        Proceeds from exercise of stock options                                    2,277            (100)
        Proceeds from notes receivable                                             1,682               -
        Repurchase of common stock                                                (9,492)              -
                                                                           ---------------------------------
        Net cash used in financing activities                                     (5,533)           (100)
                                                                           ---------------------------------


        Net change in cash and cash equivalents                                   (2,855)          1,483
        Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year                            11,299           7,621
                                                                           ---------------------------------
        Cash and cash equivalents at end of quarter                            $   8,444         $ 9,104
                                                                           =================================

        Supplemental cash flow information:
           Cash paid for interest                                              $       -         $     -
                                                                           =================================
           Cash paid for income taxes                                          $     117         $    55
                                                                           =================================

                  See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements (unaudited).



                                       32



                Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc.
                and Subsidiaries (d/b/a CHD Meridian Healthcare)
                                   (Unaudited)
                   Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements


1.       Reporting Entity and Principles of Consolidation

Reporting Entity

Effective January 1, 2000, Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc.
("Meridian") acquired Corporate Health Dimensions, based in Latham, New York. In
conjunction with the acquisition, Meridian began doing business as CHD Meridian
Healthcare ("CHD Meridian"), also referred to herein as the "Company".

CHD Meridian Healthcare is a provider of outsourced health care services to the
employer-sponsored market. The Company's model allows employers to contract
directly for a wide range of health care services on behalf of employees,
dependents, and retirees that are delivered through facilities located at or
near the work site. CHD Meridian develops and manages custom designed facilities
that address the pharmacy, primary care, occupational health, and corporate
health demands of its clients. CHD Meridian currently provides
employer-sponsored services to 90 clients at 160 locations in 31 states.

Physician services are provided at CHD Meridian's locations under management
agreements with affiliated physician associations (the Physician Groups), which
are organized professional corporations that hire licensed physicians who
provide medical services.

Pursuant to the service agreements, the Physician Groups provide all medical
aspects of CHD Meridian's services, including the development of professional
standards, policies, and procedures for a fee. CHD Meridian provides a wide
array of business services to the Physician Group, including administrative
services, support personnel, facilities, marketing, and non-medical services in
exchange for a management fee.

Principles of Consolidation

The consolidated financial statements include accounts of Meridian Occupational
Healthcare Associates, Inc., its wholly owned subsidiaries, and the Physician
Groups. The financial statements of the Physician Groups are consolidated with
CHD Meridian in accordance with the nominee shareholder model of EITF 97-2,
"Application of FASB Statement No. 94 and APB Opinion No. 16 to Physician
Practice Management Entities and Certain Other Entities with Contractual
Management Arrangements". CHD Meridian has unilateral control over the assets
and operations of the Physician Groups. Consolidation of the Physician Groups
with CHD Meridian is necessary to present fairly the financial position and
results of operations of CHD Meridian. Control of the Physician Groups is
perpetual and other than temporary because of the nominee shareholder model and
the management agreements between the entities. The net tangible assets of the
Physician Groups were not material at March 31, 2004 and 2003. All significant
intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

                                       33



                Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc.
                and Subsidiaries (d/b/a CHD Meridian Healthcare)
                                   (Unaudited)
                   Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

2.  Interim Results and Basis of Presentation

The accompanying unaudited financial statements have been prepared in accordance
with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.
In the opinion of management, the unaudited financial statements have been
prepared on the same basis as the annual financial statements and reflect all
adjustments, which include only normal recurring adjustments, necessary to
present fairly the results of the operations and cash flows for the three months
ended March 31, 2004 and 2003. The results for the three months ended March 31,
2004 are not necessarily indicative of the results to be expected for any
subsequent quarter or the entire fiscal year ending December 31, 2004.

Certain information and footnote disclosures normally included in financial
statements prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted
in the United States of America have been condensed or omitted pursuant to the
Securities and Exchange Commission's rules and regulations.

These unaudited financial statements should be read in conjunction with the
Company's audited financial statements and notes thereto for the year ended
December 31, 2003 included in I-trax, Inc.'s Current Report on Form 8-K/A filed
on November 10, 2004.

The Company records pass-through pharmaceutical purchases on a net basis in
compliance with Emerging Issues Task Force Issue No. 99-19, Reporting Gross
Revenue as a Principal vs. Net as an Agent. The table below shows the amounts of
pass through pharmaceutical purchases by period presented.

                  Quarter Ended               Quarter Ended
                  March 31, 2004              March 31, 2003
            ---------------------------- --------------------------
                    $23,222,604                 $20,016,770


3. Long-Term Debt

Effective May 15, 2000, the Company obtained a permanent $7.5 million credit
facility from Bank of America, which expired on November 15, 2002. Effective
November 15, 2002, the Company amended the permanent $7.5 million credit
facility from Bank of America. The permanent credit facility was reduced to $6.5
million and extended to November 15, 2005. The credit facility has a $3.25
million letter of credit portion with the remainder being a term loan revolver.

                                       34



                Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc.
                and Subsidiaries (d/b/a CHD Meridian Healthcare)
                                   (Unaudited)
                   Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

3. Long-Term Debt (Continued)

The credit facility is secured by substantially all of the Company's assets. At
no time may the borrowings on the credit facility exceed 75% of the Company's
assets. Borrowings, at the Company's election, may be either base rate loans or
LIBOR loans. Base rate loans bear interest at the federal funds rate plus 5% per
annum. The LIBOR loans bear interest at the LIBOR rate plus a range of 1.5% to
3.0% based on the Company's leverage ratio. At March 31, 2003, the Company had
no debt outstanding on the term loan. The credit facility was terminated as of
March 19, 2004, the date of the merger with I-trax, Inc..

The credit facility includes certain financial covenants customary for the
amount and duration of this commitment.

A letter of credit of $2 million has been issued for the benefit of The
Lexington Group, the Company's medical malpractice carrier. An additional $1.0
million letter of credit has been issued for the benefit of the Commissioner of
Insurance, State of Vermont for a Risk Retention Group to be formed and licensed
in 2004 for the Company's professional and general liability insurance.

4. Stockholders' Equity

Capital Stock

The Company has 93,500 authorized shares of Series A preferred stock and 60,000
authorized shares of Series B preferred stock. Through March 19, 2004, the date
of the merger with I-trax, Inc., the Company has not issued any of the preferred
series stock.

Stock Option Plan

The Company's 1997 Stock Incentive Plan (the "Plan") provides for qualified and
non-qualified incentive stock option grants that may be granted to key employees
as designated by the Board of Directors. The options are exercisable commencing
on dates specified in the option agreements and generally vest ratably over a
four-year period. The options expire at the earlier of ten years from the date
of grant or three months after the termination of the holder's employment with
the Company.

                                       35



                Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc.
                and Subsidiaries (d/b/a CHD Meridian Healthcare)
                                   (Unaudited)
                   Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

4. Stockholders' Equity (Continued)

Stock Option Plan (Continued)

In December 2002, the FASB issued SFAS No. 148, "Accounting for Stock-Based
Compensation-Transition and Disclosure" ("Statement 148"), which amends SFAS No.
123, "Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation" ("Statement 123"). Statement 148
provides alternative methods of transition for a voluntary change to the fair
value-based method of accounting for stock-based employee compensation and
amends the disclosure requirements of Statement 123 to require more prominent
and more frequent disclosures in financial statements about the effects of
stock-based compensation. Statement 148 is effective for financial statements
issued for fiscal years ending after December 15, 2002. The Company has elected
to account for stock-based compensation plans under the intrinsic value-based
method of accounting prescribed by APB 25 that does not utilize the fair value
method.

All options have been granted with exercise prices equal to or greater than
management's estimate of the fair value of the Company's common stock on the
date of grant. As a result, no compensation cost has been recognized. If the
alternative method of accounting for stock option plans prescribed by Statement
123 and Statement 148 had been followed, the Company's net income (loss) would
not have been materially different for the quarters ended March 31, 2004 and
2003, respectively.

The following is a summary of option transactions during 2004 and 2003:


                                                            Weighted Average
                                       Number of Shares      Exercise Price
                                     --------------------- -------------------

                                     --------------------- -------------------
Outstanding at December 31, 2002              36,092               $ 112
   Granted                                        --                  --
   Canceled                                     (625)                143
   Exercised                                 (12,300)                137
                                     --------------------- -------------------
Outstanding at December 31, 2003              23,167              $   98
                                     ===================== ===================
   Granted                                        --                  --
                                     ===================== ===================
   Canceled                                       --                  --
                                     ===================== ===================
   Exercised                                 (23,167)                 98
                                     ===================== ===================
Outstanding at March 19, 2004                     --              $   --
                                     ===================== ===================


Available for future grant                        --
                                     =====================

                                       36



                Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc.
                and Subsidiaries (d/b/a CHD Meridian Healthcare)
                                   (Unaudited)
                   Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

5. Employee Benefit Plan

The Company has a defined-contribution employee benefit plan that was
established under provisions of Section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Substantially all full-time regular employees of the Company are eligible to
participate in the plan. Under the plan's provisions, an employee may
contribute, on a tax-deferred basis, up to 15% of total cash compensation, not
to exceed, within a calendar year, subject to Internal Revenue Code limitations.
The Company can make matching contributions and discretionary contributions. The
Company made matching contributions of $151,000 and $128,000 for the quarters
ended March 31, 2004 and 2003, respectively.

6. Commitments and Contingencies

Litigation

The Company has been named as a defendant in two lawsuits seeking refund of
approximately $920,000 in payments received in the ordinary course of business
from two clients that filed for protection under bankruptcy laws during 2002 and
2003. The Company believes that amounts received are rightfully the Company's
property. The outcome of these lawsuits cannot be determined, but could have a
material adverse impact on the Company.

The Company is also involved in certain legal actions and claims on a variety of
matters related to the normal course of business. It is the opinion of
management that such legal actions will not have a material effect on the
results of operations or the financial position of the Company.

Healthcare Regulations

The healthcare industry is subject to numerous laws and regulations of Federal,
state, and local governments. These laws and regulations include, but are not
necessarily limited to, matters such as licensure, accreditation, government
healthcare program participation requirements, reimbursement for patient
services, and Medicare and Medicaid fraud and abuse. Recently, government
activity has increased with respect to investigations and allegations concerning
possible violations of fraud and abuse statutes and regulations by healthcare
providers. Violations of these laws and regulations could result in expulsion
from government healthcare programs together with the imposition of significant
fines and penalties, as well as significant repayments for patient services
previously billed. Management believes that the Company is in compliance with
fraud and abuse statutes as well as other applicable government laws and
regulations. Compliance with such laws and regulations can be subject to future
government review and interpretation as well as regulatory actions unknown or
unasserted at this time.

                                       37



                Meridian Occupational Healthcare Associates, Inc.
                and Subsidiaries (d/b/a CHD Meridian Healthcare)
                                   (Unaudited)
                   Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

7. Business Combinations

On March 19, 2004, the Company merged with I-trax, Inc., a publicly traded
company based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Pursuant to the merger agreement, the Company's shareholders, (1) received
10,000,000 shares of common stock valued at $36,300,000 utilizing $3.63 per
share, (2) received 400,000 shares of convertible preferred stock (with each
share convertible into 10 shares of common stock at a price of $2.50 per share
or 4,000,000 shares in the aggregate) at $25 per share or $10,000,000 in the
aggregate, and (3) received approximately $25,508,000 in cash. The Company has
filed a registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission to
register the common stock issued in the merger and issuable upon conversion of
convertible preferred stock issued in the merger. Immediately prior to the
merger, Meridian also redeemed certain of its then outstanding shares of common
stock and options to purchase common stock for which it paid approximately
$9,492,000 in the aggregate.

The former CHD Meridian stockholders will also receive additional shares of the
Company's common stock if CHD Meridian, continuing its operations following the
closing of the merger as CHD Meridian LLC, achieves calendar 2004 milestones for
earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (or EBITDA) as
follows: If EBITDA equals or exceeds $8,100,000, the number of such additional
common shares payable will be 3,473,280; the number of such shares increases
proportionately up to a maximum of 3,859,200 additional shares of the Company's
common stock if EBITDA equals or exceeds $9,000,000. In connection with this
earn-out, the Company placed 3,859,200 shares in escrow.

The Company incurred transaction costs of $1,938,000 that are included in the
general and administrative expenses in the consolidated statement of operations
for the period ending March 31, 2004.

                                       38



                                    SIGNATURE

         In accordance with the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, the registrant caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.


                                      I-TRAX, INC.

Date: November 10, 2004               By: /s/  Frank A. Martin            
                                      ----------------------------------
                                      Name:   Frank A. Martin
                                      Title:     Chief Executive Officer

                                       39