10-second health assessments and ongoing monitoring for a fresh perspective on personal health.
In the near future, individuals will utilize AI-equipped devices at home to scan their faces and bodies for health evaluations.
As technology and healthcare continue to merge, the Chinese startup Feipu Tech is investigating how non-invasive health assessment technologies can be integrated into daily life. By fusing consumer-oriented AI with computational biology models, the company seeks to enhance the speed, accuracy, and accessibility of health monitoring beyond traditional medical environments.
Feipu’s devices are engineered for ease of use and quick results. Users can gather and evaluate several crucial health metrics within seconds, suitable for individual use at home as well as in workplaces, gyms, and community health centers. This strategy mirrors a larger trend towards more convenient and ongoing health management.
Health assessments become part of daily routine with a 10-second facial scan
The Feipu non-invasive health monitoring robot incorporates various technologies, including multimodal optical tomography and its proprietary FEIPU MiLC (Multimodal Integrated Language Computing) engine. The company claims that the device can perform non-invasive measurements of essential physiological parameters—like blood pressure, blood glucose, blood lipids, hemoglobin, and BMI—in roughly 10 seconds.
The device is intended for straightforward, self-service operation. A user simply stands in front of the robot, which is comparable in size to a TV screen, positions their face in the scanning area, and the system automatically gathers facial and subcutaneous optical signals. The AI engine analyzes this data instantly and generates a personalized report featuring key health metrics, risk notifications, and lifestyle suggestions.
According to the company, the data reflects an overall accuracy exceeding 85%, with certain metrics (such as blood pressure and blood glucose) achieving around 95%, nearly matching the performance of some Class II medical devices in China.
Unlike conventional health check methods, this device does not require blood sampling or complicated procedures. However, its effectiveness in real-world settings still needs further validation through independent research and long-term data collection.
A health ecosystem connecting homes and communities
The lightweight design of the Feipu robot, akin to a 32-inch TV, makes it suitable for various settings including homes, gyms, workplaces, senior care facilities, and community health centers.
At home, elderly members and children can carry out self-assessments, with data uploaded to the cloud to create long-term health records. In workplaces, it offers fundamental health monitoring to keep track of employee wellness and aids in occupational health management.
Within community or public service environments, the device can collaborate with relevant organizations to enable residents to conduct self-service health screenings and contribute data to public health initiatives.
Life mirror platform and advancements in health technology
The company has created the Human Life Mirror computing platform, which merges multimodal sensing, deep reinforcement learning, and extensive biological data algorithms. This enables the device to continuously enhance its performance based on user data, as information collected from terminals is fed back into the AI model to improve detection accuracy over time.
Leveraging this platform, the company is also investigating applications such as early cancer screening, immune system assessment, and support for diagnostic robotics. They have introduced the first genome-scale SNP analysis model, SNPBag, to facilitate large-scale biological data analysis and research.
The social impact of simplifying health management
Feipu Tech aspires to make health monitoring as effortless as checking the weather. As articulated by the company’s founder, Tang Kun, “We are utilizing technology to empower everyone to become a life scientist.”
Under the Healthy China initiative, Feipu Tech is harnessing non-invasive health check technology to tap into the trillion-yuan health management industry. The closed-loop system of “detection, alert, and intervention” serves as a benchmark for industry practices and applies findings from life science research to everyday contexts.
Jessie Wu is a tech journalist based in Shanghai, covering consumer electronics, semiconductors, and the gaming industry for TechNode. You can reach her via email: jessie.wu@technode.com.
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