This startup wants to improve child gut health with personalized nutrition plans. See the pitch deck it used to raise $2.5 million.
Alba Health, a Swedish-Danish startup focused on gut health and personalized nutrition for children, has raised $2.5 million in seed funding.
The startup was founded in 2022 by Eleonora Cavani, CEO, and Professor Willem Meindert de Vos, its chief scientific officer and a microbiome scientist with more than 800 research publications.
By offering gut microbiome tests, personalized nutrition plans, and one-on-one calls with a certified children's nutrition coach, the startup is aiming to tackle a problem Cavani knows firsthand.
"I grew up with a lot of allergies," Cavani told Business Insider. "I was that one kid that couldn't play outside with the others during the spring. I missed out on so many experiences."
Cavani said that at age 27, severe eczema turned her "life upside down." After resolving her own eczema and chronic pain through gut-focused lifestyle changes, Cavani said she teamed up with de Vos to build Alba and help families address childhood gut health before problems emerge.
Cavani told BI that de Vos's research shows the gut microbiome in the first years of life can help predict allergy risk later on.
"Our long-term mission is to reduce the risk of allergies and eczema," Cavani said. "But right now, we help families make better choices in their children's and their family's diet and lifestyle for the best start in life."
She added, "We don't diagnose or cure allergies. What we do is help families with wellbeing — and nothing we offer should replace going to doctors."
Alba's clinical approach is backed by over 1,600 scientific publications and its own study, which, in partnership with top universities, tracks the gut microbiome development in more than 300 Swedish families.
The seed round was led by Unconventional Ventures, with support from Exceptional Ventures, Voima Ventures, Noaber, Bust, and the founder of Oura Ring, a smart device company.
"In the next five years, gut health has the potential to become the new sleep," said Oura founder Petteri Lahtela, referring to the recent boom in sleep tracking technology.
Alba plans to use the fresh funding to grow its digital platform, invest in further clinical research, and reach more families across Europe and the UK.
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Business Insider
8 hours ago
- Business Insider
Forget 'biological age' tests — longevity experts are using an $800 under-the-radar blood test to measure aging in real-time
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Elite longevity clinics already use proteomics Some high-end longevity clinics are already forging ahead using proteomics to guide clinical recommendations, albeit cautiously. Dr. Evelyne Bischof, a longevity physician who treats patients worldwide, said she uses proteomic information to guide some of the lifestyle interventions she recommends to her patients. She may suggest a more polyphenol-rich diet to someone who seems to have high inflammation and neuroinflammation based on proteomic test results, or may even suggest they do a little more cognitive training, based on what proteomics says about how their brain is aging. Dr. Andrea Maier, a professor of medicine and functional aging at the National University of Singapore, told BI she uses this measurement all the time in her longevity clinics. For her, it's just a research tool, but if the results of her ongoing studies are decent, she hopes to be able to use it clinically in a few years' time. 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Yahoo
21 hours ago
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A ship called Madleen: Gaza's first fisherwoman inspires solidarity mission
Gaza City – As the Madleen sails towards Gaza to try to deliver life-saving aid to its people, little is known about the woman the boat was named after: Madleen Kulab, Gaza's only fisherwoman. When Al Jazeera first met Madleen Kulab (also spelled Madelyn Culab) three years ago, she had two children, was expecting her third and lived a relatively quiet life in Gaza City with her husband, Khader Bakr, 32, also a fisherman. Madleen, now 30, would sail fearlessly out as far as Israel's gunship blockade would allow to bring back fish she could sell in a local market to support the family. When Israel's war on Gaza began, the family was terrified, then heartbroken when Israel killed Madleen's father in an air strike near their home in November 2023. They fled with Madleen nearly nine months pregnant to Khan Younis, then to Rafah, to Deir el-Balah and then Nuseirat. Now, they are back in what remains of their home in Gaza City, a badly damaged space they returned to when the Israeli army allowed displaced people to head back north in sits on a battered sofa in her damaged living room, three of her four children sitting with her: baby Waseela, one, on her lap; five-year-old Safinaz beside her; and three-year-old Jamal – the baby she was expecting when Al Jazeera first met her – at the end. She talks about what it felt like to hear from an Irish activist friend that the ship trying to break the blockade on Gaza would be named after her. 'I was deeply moved. I felt an enormous sense of responsibility and a little pride,' she says with a smile. 'I'm grateful to these activists who have devoted themselves, left their lives and comforts behind, and stood with Gaza despite all the risks,' she says of the group of 12 activists, who include Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg and Rima Hassan, a French member of the European Parliament. 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They may have bombed my boat, but my name will remain – and it will sail across the sea.'


WIRED
a day ago
- WIRED
Why More Young People Are Becoming 'Relationship Anarchists'
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Relationship anarchy (RA) is a relationship philosophy built around clear values: it is anti-hierarchal, anti-capitalist, prioritizes mutual care, and is all about cultivating relationships based on consent. The term, according to Feeld, was coined in 2006 by Swedish writer and activist Andie Nordgren, who said in her manifesto, relationship anarchy 'questions the idea that love is a limited resource that can only be real if restricted to a couple.' Though the lifestyle has quietly emerged as a prevailing relationship framework among communes in San Francisco and across Europe in the last decade, it is again finding a wider audience in our current era of romantic upheaval, where young people are staying single for longer, and polyamory has become far more common. According to the Feeld study, one in five people practice it unknowingly, and 36 percent of 25 to 36 year olds have adopted the lifestyle, compared to 15 percent of Boomers. Lavvynder was in a vulnerable but curious space, separated from their partner of two years, when they stumbled on a friend's Instagram story about relationship anarchy in 2023. The software project manager had no previous experience with it but felt drawn to its possibilities. 'I also familiarized myself with the Relationship Anarchy Smorgasbord,' a worksheet that helps people set terms for how to define an anarchist relationship unique to their circumstance,' Lavvynder says. 'It's about asking, 'What are the things that we want to be involved in this relationship and what are we gonna agree is part of this relationship? Are we interested in being creative partners? Are we interested in being sexual partners?'' Since then they have fully embraced the lifestyle. We can all agree: dating sucks and has only gotten harder. Forty-seven percent of US adults say dating is more difficult today than it was a decade ago. That has led to a growing interest in alternative lifestyles. According to the Journal of Sex and Martial Therapy , one in five people surveyed in the US and Canada have had experience with non-monogamy. Nontraditional relationships are especially popular among millennials and Gen Z; over 70 percent say they are open to less conventional approaches to partnership, including polyamory and open relationships, according to a study by R29 Intelligence. For relationship anarchists, there is no pecking order among their connections—partners, friends, neighbors, colleagues—are all regarded the same. They treat all their relationships equally, be they romantic or platonic, and believe each relationship possesses 'similar or identical potential for emotional, physical, or mental intimacy, love, and satisfaction,' Rare noted in the study. No one person is given preference over the other. It may seem like relationship anarchy mirrors polyamory but there are fundamental distinctions. Some poly people apply hierarchies to their relationships—'veto power,' as Lavvynder calls it. Relationship anarchists, who can be poly, do not put romantic partners above anyone. 'We're not making rules about other people's relationships. We're just focusing on the connection that we have with that other person.' One misconception about relationship anarchists is that they have perfected relationship dynamics, but that couldn't be further from the truth, Lavvynder adds. 'A lot of people will tell me, 'oh, I wish I could be polyamorous or a relationship anarchist, but I just get too jealous.' And it's like, well, I get jealous too. I'm not void of that emotion. I also experience jealousy. If my partner is talking to somebody new, I feel threatened by that. But the way to deal with that is not to make some rule about how your partner is engaging with other people. It's to figure out what you need to do for yourself,' they say. 'It's really fucking hard, actually.' It's all about shared values, not sexual exclusivity, says Sam, a 33-year-old music licensing administrator in Los Angeles who identifies as gender fluid. Relationship anarchy pushed her to rethink how she defined connection. 'Everyone is taught the rules at a young age: one person in your life is meant to be your everything,' she says, likening it to 'a Disney fairytale romance.' And 'any deviation from that is an offense beyond repair.' People, she says, would feel more fulfilled in their relationships 'if they were able to prioritize others based on what they actually wanted versus what they believe is expected of them.' Sam came to the realization following a breakup. She was 'freshly out as a queer person,' new to nonmonogamy, and in a relationship that encouraged the exploration of her sexual identity. She and her ex were 'swingers ' but Sam says she was 'deeply uncomfortable and unfulfilled' by all the 'casual and often unsatisfying' sexual experiences. When the relationship ended, she dove into the polyamory scene in Los Angeles, where she later learned about relationship anarchy. José Esteban Muñoz, in Cruising Utopia: The Then and There of Queer Futurity , has suggested that 'queerness is a structuring and educated mode of desiring that allows us to see and feel beyond the quagmire of the present.' It comes as no surprise, then, that young people who identify as LGBTQIA+ and also practice ethical nonmonogamy are finding that relationship anarchy is for them. 'We've pushed so many societal norms already and we're in this place where it's like, well, how else can we push this even more?' Lavvynder says. 'It's a function of more and more people coming out as queer and being in queer relationships. They are realizing that there are alternatives to the norm of what love can be,' Jack says. Jack is a 30-year-old physician who identifies as nonbinary. They discovered relationship anarchy during the pandemic. Freed from 'a cycle of serial monogamy,' they say they were introduced to the lifestyle by their current partner, who they live with in Brooklyn, New York. 'We all had so much time to sit and think, and really self-examine. I had time to expose myself to these new ideas. For a lot of people you just don't know what else you can do—until you do. That was certainly the case for me.' Jack and his partner have been together five years. Jack also has three other romantic partners currently—one in San Francisco, another in Asheville, North Carolina and a person they just started seeing in Rhode Island because 'apparently I hate dating people that actually live in the same city as myself.' Above all, Jack says, respect is prioritized in each relationship. Lavvynder, Sam, and Jack requested their last names not be used due to privacy concerns. Still, navigating relationships doesn't come easy. 'It requires a deep level of self reflection, honesty, and communication that we are not taught and is not modeled to us in any traditional societal structures,' Sam says. 'Your boundaries will differ from relationship to relationship.' 'It is difficult and something you have to be conscious of, at least I do,' Jack adds 'I'm not that good at it yet.'