Daily Newsletter

17 January 2024

Daily Newsletter

17 January 2024

Bloomlife receives FDA clearance for Bloomlife MFM-Pro device

Bloomlife MFM-Pro is a prescription-based wearable device designed to monitor maternal and fetal heart rates.

Archana Rani January 17 2024

Maternal health company Bloomlife has announced the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) clearance of its Bloomlife MFM-Pro device.

The Bloomlife MFM-Pro prescription-based wearable device is designed to monitor maternal and fetal heart rates, facilitating care in both home and clinical settings.

It can non-invasively measure the body's electrical activity and uses cloud-based processing to algorithmically extract maternal and fetal heart rates.

Bloomlife co-founder and CEO Eric Dy said: “Our pioneering consumer pregnancy tracker proved that women want access to more information during a pivotal time of their life. The FDA clearance of Bloomlife MFM-Pro marks an important milestone by cementing our transition from consumer to medical markets.”

The latest approval follows Bloomlife's partnership with Perigen to improve access to essential high-risk pregnancy monitoring.

The partnership, which was announced earlier this month, will combine remote patient monitoring and AI-driven analytics to bring cost-effective procedures to patients.

Bloomlife said it aims to leverage technology to shift care from high-cost clinical environments to the home, aiming to provide evidence-based, cost-effective, high-quality, patient-centered care.

Dy added: "Covid revealed a significant amount of maternal care can be done outside of clinical settings. However, there remains a need to augment basic telehealth appointments with objective physiological data.

“Utilisation of connected care solutions can not only increase the quality of virtual appointments, but allow us to build a more efficient, equitable, and scalable means of screening and managing the health of mom and baby.”

Bloomlife designs solutions for remote maternal health to improve the health and well-being of mothers and babies.

Healthcare industry continues to be highly vulnerable to cyberattacks

Cybersecurity is a growing market in the medical devices sector for several reasons. Medical devices often collect and contain vulnerable data, such as patient medical information. Legacy medical devices are a cause for concern because they likely were not designed with cyberattacks in mind. With the adoption of EHR systems, telemedicine measures, mobile health apps, and other connected devices, there is increased vulnerability to cyberattacks.

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