Pregnancy is a delicate journey. Western medicine has evolved to provide the best possible care for pregnant moms – in hospitals and in clinics. But what happens during and after a missile attack when the facilities are not safe or accessible? What happens when pregnant moms who were already hospitalized for high-risk conditions such as preeclampsia or FGR, are suddenly told they must go home now because the hospital is under threat from missile attacks?
The answer sounds simple but was over a decade in the making: if you cannot bring the pregnant mom to the hospital, bring the hospital to the pregnant mom!
In Israel this was fast-tracked into reality after Oct 7. What has happened since and especially now during the current Israel crisis, is transforming pregnancy care with global implications that extend well beyond Israel’s present crisis.
In the days following the horrific events of Oct 7, 2023 the urgency of the moment cut through the typical layers of healthcare bureaucracy. Sheba Beyond Maternity Care, a leading clinic in Israel, was ordered to clear out the maternity ward to make space in the hospital for the anticipated dramatic increase in soldier and civilian casualties. However, sending high-risk pregnant moms home without proper care could dramatically increase the risk of an adverse, and possibly life-threatening, outcome.
As fate would have it, Sheba Beyond was already collaborating in a clinical study with Nuvo, an innovative Israeli start-up that pioneered a groundbreaking wearable platform called INVU that was specifically designed to enable moms to monitor themselves and their baby-in-utero from anywhere, anytime, with medical data automatically sent to their physicians. The perfect solution in a time of need – as long as INVU could be approved by the Israel Health Ministry. Nuvo had good reason to be concerned about timing since it had just previously received FDA approval only after years of regulatory review.
This time it took just three weeks! The Israel Health Ministry fast-tracked the approval for the use of INVU to de-hospitalize high-risk patients based on the results of the already in progress clinical study being conducted by Sheba Beyond and Nuvo, along with the extensive clinical evidence that was used to receive the U.S. FDA approval.
Sheba Beyond has been de-hospitalizing high-risk pregnancies ever since and monitoring them remotely using INVU with exceptional results. Moms with high-risk pregnancies who would otherwise be confined to a hospital ward are instead receiving care from the comfort of their home or work with full medical oversight. The positive outcomes of Sheba Beyond’s experience has become the basis of significant ongoing studies, with initial results published in a major medical peer reviewed journal1 as well as presented at a prominent medical conference2.
With the current heightened threat in Israel of missile attacks amplified by the direct missile hit on Soroka hospital in Southern Israel, it became immediately paramount to accelerate ‘hospital-at-home’ care for all departments. The next stage of remote pregnancy care is evolving in real-time and will have a global impact.
Sheba Beyond serves as a blueprint for the U.S. to also provide ‘hospital-at-home’ pregnancy care that could solve major issues in the U.S. healthcare system. Expanded use of remote non-stress tests (NSTs), as facilitated by INVU (which is FDA approved and already in use in the U.S.), can deliver significant benefits across cost, access, and clinical outcomes.
Benefits of Ambulatory Service-Provided Spot NST Checks: Incorporating ambulatory services equipped with INVUs mobile NST capabilities provides a critical bridge between hospital care and remote monitoring. When a pregnant woman experiences symptoms or concerns, an on-the-spot INVU NST check performed by an ambulance-based team can rapidly assess fetal well-being and maternal status. This model offers several key benefits:
Using INVU by Nuvo for remote pregnancy monitoring can enhance flexibility and safety while reinforcing the shift to patient-centered, digitally enabled prenatal care.
Israel is widely recognized and admired for its military capability and achievements in cybersecurity. Israel deserves an equal spotlight for groundbreaking innovation that helps “give life a better beginning”. What happens during pregnancy can affect a child’s health for the rest of their life13. A healthy pregnancy lays the foundation for a healthier life, not just for the baby, but for the mother too14.
Here is how you can help:
Share the link to this story: www.nuvocares.com/resources/from-war-zone-to-living-rooms-israeli-innovation-redefines-pregnancy-care-at-home
Share other Sheba Beyond – Nuvo links:
Post in social media sites, start a conversation, ask a question, invite feedback:
Follow, like, comment, and reshare Nuvo on:
Tag Nuvo on:
Tag friends who are pregnant, work in healthcare, or care about Israeli innovation
Consider Donating to Sheba Beyond Maternity Care
Support the expansion of Sheba Beyond’s Maternity Care through a donation by contacting its head: Dr Avi Tsur.
Considering Remote Pregnancy Monitoring
For more information about Nuvo contact us
1 Link: https://obgyn.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ijgo.16148
2 Link: https://www.nuvocares.com/resources/nuvo-team-collaborators-at-smfm-2025-showcasingadvances-in-remote-pregnancy-monitoring
3 Kozhimannil, K.B., et al. (2014). "Maternal hospital-based utilization in the weeks after childbirth." Journal of Women's Health, 23(7), 587–592. Link: https://doi.org/10.1089/jwh.2013.4560
4 Pflugeisen, B.M., McCarren, C., Poore, S., Carlile, M., & Schroeder, R. (2016). “Virtual visits and patient centered care: Results of a patient survey and observational study.” Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare, 22(4), 238–242. Link: https://doi.org/10.1177/1357633X15586690
5 Smith, G.C., et al. (2011). “Indications for prolonged maternal hospitalization.” Obstetrics & Gynecology, 117(2), 398–403. Link: https://journals.lww.com/greenjournal/Fulltext/2011/02000/
6 Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ). “Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP).” Link: https://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov
7 March of Dimes. (2022). “Nowhere to Go: Maternity Care Deserts Across the U.S.” Link: https://www.marchofdimes.org/research/maternity-care-deserts-report.aspx
8 Marko, K.I., et al. (2019). “Remote prenatal care monitoring: A prospective pilot study of maternal and fetal outcomes.” Telemedicine and e-Health, 25(6), 489–494. Link: https://doi.org/10.1089/tmj.2018.0055
9 Deloitte Insights. (2020). “Digitizing pregnancy care: Using technology to improve maternal outcomes.” Link: https://www2.deloitte.com/insights/us/en/industry/health-care/technology-and-pregnancy-care.html
10 Chen, M., et al. (2022). “Telehealth monitoring for high-risk pregnancies: A review of outcomes and implementation.” JMIR mHealth and uHealth, 10(3): e25520. Link: https://mhealth.jmir.org/2022/3/e25520
11 Satpathy, H.K., et al. (2015). “Mobile health technology for pregnancy monitoring in underserved communities.” Journal of Perinatology, 35(11), 938–943.
Link: https://doi.org/10.1038/jp.2015.95
12 Peterson, E., Davis, N., & Dick, A. (2021). “Community paramedicine in maternal care: Opportunities and outcomes.” Health AEairs Blog. Link: https://www.healthalairs.org/do/10.1377/forefront.20210721.479175/
13 Barker, D.J.P. (1990). The fetal and infant origins of adult disease. BMJ, 301(6761), 1111. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.301.6761.1111
14 Hanson, M.A., & Gluckman, P.D. (2014). Early developmental conditioning of later health and disease: Physiology or pathophysiology? Physiological Reviews, 94(4), 1027–1076. https://doi.org/10.1152/physrev.00029.2013