产品展示
  • 骆驼汽车电瓶EFB蓄电池60ah适配本田思域雅阁哈弗H6大众宝来专用
  • 丹麦D6汽车音响低音炮车门喇叭四路功放车载4声道大功率功放12V
  • 吉利博越博瑞GE帝豪EC7自由舰前门后门汽车音响改装专用同轴喇叭
  • 大众宝来后备箱隔物板挡板整理收纳汽车改装饰用品储物盒收纳配件
  • 12年大众朗逸速腾捷达宝来凌渡途安高尔夫7原装电瓶瓦尔塔蓄电池
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车音响

The next frontier in wearables is helping couples conceive

2024-05-29 18:16:37      点击:029

The next round of wearables is good for more than tracking your steps.

Ava, a fertility wearable that helps couples conceive, raised $9.7 million in a Series A round this week. The round was led by Polytech Ventures, a European VC firm.

The FDA-approved medical device tracks measurements like pulse rate, breathing rate, skin temperature, movement and heat loss to identify the days of each month when a woman is most likely to get pregnant.

Women wear the device while sleeping. The technology detects at least five fertile days each month, far more than women are usually able to identify by taking their temperatures or taking ovulation tests. It costs $199.

SEE ALSO:The Apple Watch Nike+ will make you miss running with your phone

"It's a much more convenient way to track your cycle," Ava co-founder Lea von Bidder told Mashable. "It's not peeing on a stick and running out of meetings, it's not getting up every morning at 6 a.m., even on weekends, to take your temperature."

Mashable Top StoriesStay connected with the hottest stories of the day and the latest entertainment news.Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletterBy signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

The device represents a step for wearables toward more fundamental uses than going swimming with a waterproof Apple Watch.

Right now, Ava is used for tracking the signifiers that help with conception. But von Bidder envisions it as a device that women could use during any stage of life to understand their body's changes during menopause, track hormonal changes during pregnancy or even eventually use as a form of non-hormonal birth control (like a high-tech rhythm method).

SEE ALSO:Nurx wants you to get birth control from an app

Ava's team comes more from medical than tech side of things. The company, founded in Zurich, ran a clinical trial to get its device approved and is focused on medical applications. Its new round of funding will go toward a second clinical trial, as Ava scales to reach a wider market and researches other potential uses for the bracelet.

The use of wearables for fertility is something that could eventually be incorporated into the FitBit or Apple Watch. But even as Apple moves further into the health space, fertility hasn't seemed to be an area of focus for its all-encompassing wearable.

Ava says that the number of body measurements the product tracks makes it prohibitive to incorporate other uses for reasons as simple as battery life. Other wearables that measure fertility generally focus on the traditional measurement of temperature.

After Ava's official market launch in July, the first couples to get pregnant using the bracelet are now in their first trimester.


Featured Video For You
Take calls from your fingertip with this amazing device

S. Korean envoy to U.S. highlights need for 'creative' ways to counter N. Korean threat
US, French leaders condemn N. Korea's missile tests: joint statement