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AI-powered app set to become the ‘Netflix of medical education’
Spanish app Xpeer aims to redefine medical education through video microlearning

A Spanish app is set to become the “Netflix of medical education” with a new approach to clinical training.
Xpeer is an app that aims to make medical education easy, cheap and accessible through bite-sized videos, audios and podcasts, allowing healthcare professionals to stay up-to-date with the latest medical advances.
Using the concept of microlearning, the platform provides users with interactive, accredited courses across 60 different specialties, including women’s health and holistic medicine.
The algorithm develops a personal development plan based on the user’s key therapeutic areas, interests, seniority level and educational needs and helps healthcare professionals connect with other researchers and physicians.
“All they need to do is register on our website,” Xpeer founder and CEO, Daniela Clape, tells Femtech World.
“They have access to about 80 per cent of our content for free and for the premium resources, they will have to subscribe for €10 per month. Just like on Netflix.”
After spending 20 years in the health sector, Clape became frustrated with the lack of innovation in medical education and wanted to make a change.
“There was nothing out there for medical professionals. I looked at platforms like masterclass.com, where you have the best in Hollywood teaching you their secrets, and I wanted to create the same thing for my sector,” she explains.
The founder launched Xpeer in 2019 and since then she amassed over 15,000 users from all over the world.
“Europe is the leader, the second block is the US and the third block is Latin America. Our goal is to reach one million users and become the leader in digital medical education.”
The importance of medical education
More and more studies suggest that rapid technological change will require retraining and rethinking the roles of clinicians, with researchers believing this is likely to affect every clinician from doctors to nurses, pharmacists to paramedics and beyond.
“The technology is evolving, but the healthcare professionals are still lacking the education and knowledge they need to get those solutions to their patients,” says Clape, noting that health tech training is one of the most popular topics on the app.
“What we see with the healthcare professionals is that anything that is new technology needs evidence. So if you want to convince a doctor or another healthcare professional to use a new product, you have to do so with evidence.
“They will also ask for the Medical Society to support that product which makes the process even longer.
“Our aim is to educate them in a good and certified way so that they can adopt new solutions quicker.”
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Femtech World reveals startup of the year shortlist

We are excited unveil the three finalists competing for one of the Femtech World Awards’ most coveted honours: the Startup of the Year Award, sponsored by Future Fertility.
This award celebrates an early-stage company making a bold impact in women’s health through innovation, vision and execution.
The winner will be announced at our virtual ceremony on 19 June, with the decision made by a representative from category sponsor Future Fertility.
Congratulations to the shortlist and thank you to everyone who entered or nominated.
Startup of the Year Shortlist

Hello Inside is the first women’s health AI company to turn daily metabolic signals into outcomes women feel and healthcare systems reimburse.
Women’s health has long been under-researched, and current AI benchmarks fail on women’s health questions roughly sixty percent of the time.
Hello Inside built the architecture to close that gap.
Across four years and 12,000+ validated metabolic profiles, three in four women improve at least one symptom within ninety days.
They lose four kilograms in three months, moving from overweight into the healthy range. In a clinical study with Alisa Vitti’s Flo Living, 91.9 per cent reduced PMS burden within sixty days.


U-Ploid is an early-stage biotechnology company tackling one of the most fundamental challenges in fertility care: the sharp, age-related decline in egg quality that limits outcomes across IVF and egg freezing.
While much of the field focuses on improving assessment and selection, U-Ploid is developing a first-in-class therapeutic approach designed to improve egg quality itself by addressing the biological causes of age-related chromosomal errors.
Supported by strong preclinical evidence and now advancing into human studies, U-Ploid combines scientific rigour, regulatory discipline and long-term vision to help redefine what is possible in fertility care.
News
Gestational diabetes increases risk of type 2 diabetes – even at normal weight, study finds

Gestational diabetes is a strong risk factor for future type 2 diabetes, even in women with normal pre-pregnancy weight, according to a study at the University of Gothenburg.
The researchers call for earlier testing and better follow-up.
“Our results show that gestational diabetes functions as a kind of stress test for the body’s ability to manage blood sugar, and identifies women with a greatly increased risk of future type 2 diabetes”, said Jon Edqvist, PhD and affiliated to research at the University of Gothenburg, and operating room nurse at Sahlgrenska University Hospital.
Gestational diabetes is a special type of diabetes that can affect pregnant women.
The condition is defined as elevated blood sugar levels, without previously known diabetes. Treatment involves self-monitoring of blood sugar, advice on lifestyle habits and, if necessary, medication.
Identifying gestational diabetes is important because the disease increases the risk of complications such as preeclampsia, the need for a cesarean section and high birth weight for the baby.
Those who have had gestational diabetes are also at higher risk of later developing type 2 diabetes.
In the current study, published in eClinicalMedicine, researchers now show that gestational diabetes is a strong indicator of future risk of developing type 2 diabetes, even in women with normal weight before pregnancy.
Elevated risk even with normal weight
The study is based on data from the Medical Birth Registry on just over 1.15 million first-time mothers in Sweden, who gave birth between 1987 and 2019. 16,870 women with confirmed gestational diabetes were compared with age-matched women without the diagnosis. The median follow-up period was nine years.
The results show that women with a BMI of 35 and above, i.e. severe obesity, had an almost tenfold increased risk of developing gestational diabetes compared to women with normal weight.
The risk of subsequent type 2 diabetes also increased with higher BMI, but it was significantly increased even with normal weight, which the researchers describe as particularly worrying.
More follow-up and more studies
The researchers behind the study welcome the recently updated recommendations on gestational diabetes in Sweden, where a higher proportion of pregnant women at increased risk are expected to be offered testing earlier in pregnancy, and if necessary, interventions.
“Diagnostics and care of gestational diabetes have looked very different in different parts of the country,” said Annika Rosengren, professor at the University of Gothenburg.
“There is a need for both improved follow-up after gestational diabetes, and more studies that investigate how such follow-up affects future health and prognosis”
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