The Problem
The Gap in Fetal Care is Costing Lives.
Despite decades of advances in medicine, the way we monitor unborn babies has remained fundamentally unchanged. Monitoring is episodic, hospital-dependent, and, at the most critical moments, insufficiently precise. The consequences are measured in lives.
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Monitoring only happens in the clinic
Most expectant mothers receive fetal monitoring only at scheduled appointments. Between visits, often weeks apart, there is no visibility into fetal wellbeing. Warning signs go undetected until it is too late to intervene effectively.
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Hospitals are overwhelmed
Surging demand for antenatal care is placing unsustainable pressure on global maternity services. Every day, maternity assessment units are overwhelmed by thousands of patients requiring cardiotocography (CTG) monitoring, exposing the fact that the current system was never designed to support the scale of modern maternity needs.
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Labour monitoring fails mothers & babies
While CTG remains the standard of care for fetal monitoring, this decades-old technology provides insufficient accuracy when clinical decisions matter most. The resulting uncertainty drives a cycle of unnecessary interventions, placing both mothers and babies at avoidable risk.
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Outcomes lag behind the technology era
In an age of continuous glucose monitors, remote cardiac telemetry, and AI-assisted diagnostics, fetal monitoring remains a glaring outlier. The most vulnerable patient, the unborn child, is also the least monitored. We are developing the technology to change this reality.