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Withings Health Solutions and Babyscripts Partner to Combat Leading Cause of Pregnancy-Related Death in the United States

4 min read

Collaboration aligns with new guidance from American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists to enable real-time, remote patient monitoring (RPM) of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP)

 

Boston, MA – May 8, 2025 – Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP), including preeclampsia, impact nearly 15 percent of all pregnancies in the U.S. They are among the leading causes of maternal morbidity and mortality and are on the rise, with women having babies now twice as likely to develop HDP as their mothers. Today, Babyscripts, the leading virtual maternity care program for managing obstetrics, announced a partnership with Withings Health Solutions, a pioneer in digital health technology, to enhance its remote blood pressure monitoring offering with Withings’ accessible devices— addressing this critical public health issue with more options for inclusive, real-time monitoring.

 

As part of the collaboration, Babyscripts members will now have access to Withings BPM Pro 2, an FDA-cleared cellular blood pressure monitor that enables at-home blood pressure tracking. BPM Pro 2 introduces a first-of-its-kind feature, Patient Insights, which prompts patients to answer a short questionnaire directly on the device screen after taking a reading to gather critical information around symptoms and risk factors. This allows healthcare providers to detect early warning signs of HDP outside of traditional clinical settings, enabling timely intervention—particularly for women in underserved or resource-limited communities.

 

“Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy develop silently but escalate quickly, which is why real-time home monitoring can be life-saving,” said Antoine Robiliard, Vice President of Withings Health Solutions. “BPM Pro 2 and our Patient Insights feature were designed to go beyond the numbers, capturing symptoms and context from patients at the moment a high reading occurs. We are proud that Babyscripts has chosen Withings Health Solutions to support their proven maternity platform. Using BPM Pro 2, they’re delivering a solution that’s clinically robust, inclusive by design, and built for the realities of pregnancy, when ease, speed, and trust matter most.” 

 

This announcement comes on the heels of new guidance from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) which advocates for personalized prenatal care, such as routine monitoring of blood pressure and alternative care modalities like telemedicine to improve outcomes for pregnant and postpartum patients.  

 

“Our decade of research and clinical implementation confirms that positive outcomes are linked to empowering women to monitor their own blood pressure and share data with providers,” said Anish Sebastian, CEO and co-founder of Babyscripts. “Our partnership with Withings expands our reach and inclusivity by offering blood pressure cuffs that accommodate a broad range of body sizes and BMIs—ensuring accurate, equitable care for all patients.”

 

While many women are educated about recognizable symptoms of HDP—such as persistent headaches or swelling—issues can often present without visible symptoms, making proactive monitoring essential for early detection and critical intervention. This was the case for Meredith Jones,* whose healthy pregnancy took a sudden, life-threatening turn at 38 weeks when she recorded several elevated blood pressure readings. Equipped with a Withings blood pressure cuff and education from Babyscripts, Meredith recognized the warning signs of preeclampsia and sought immediate care. She was admitted to the hospital and induced, ultimately delivering a healthy baby boy.

 

Remote patient monitoring (RPM) with devices like those from Withings Health Solutions provides a practical, scalable way for providers and patients to manage hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP). By combining this technology with Babyscripts’ virtual maternity care platform, the two companies are setting a new standard for maternal health—delivering evidence-based solutions that reduce risk and save lives.

 

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About Withings Health Solutions 

 

Withings Health Solutions is a dedicated division of global connected health leader Withings, serving healthcare professionals across chronic disease prevention and management, remote patient monitoring, clinical research and more. Its mission is to bridge the gap between patients and their care teams by continuously and effortlessly providing healthcare professionals with medical-grade data generated by patients from an ecosystem of connected devices. For more than a decade, Withings has built an expertise in user experience, engagement and retention. Withings Health Solutions extends this expertise to the healthcare industry to remove friction in the patient’s journey and allow for digital health to expand. For more information, visit www.withingshealthsolutions.com.

 

About Babyscripts

 

Babyscripts delivers a patient-centered, clinically-supported maternity care program that educates, engages, and empowers pregnant and postpartum patients and their care team with the help of intelligent technology. Founded in 2014, Babyscripts offers the most-implemented mobile clinical solution for remote management of pregnancy and postpartum, with the mission to eliminate maternal mortality and improve access to care for all. For more information on our maternity care program, to access our research portfolio, and to request a demo, visit www.babyscripts.com

 

 

*Name changed to protect patient privacy. 

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Refugees are a subset of the population that suffer displacement and other stressors, and once they reach their new home country, medical conditions including hypertension can go undetected and untreated. However, research into this very topic began in February 2021. The study entitled “Perceptions, Knowledge, and Attitudes Towards Hypertension Management among Refugees in San Diego” is being carried out by Dr. Tala Al-Rousan, a founding faculty member at the Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health at the University of California San Diego, in partnership with Dr. Job Godino who leads the Laura Rodriguez Research Institute at the Family Health Care Centers of San Diego.

Throughout the program, participants are using Withings BPM Connect, a smart blood pressure monitor, as well as the Withings Data Hub, a cellular gateway used to collect measurements. The study is funded by The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the US National Institutes of Health. It aims to contribute to a relatively small body of literature surrounding the unaddressed global challenge of uncontrolled blood pressure in displaced populations including refugees and asylum seekers. The problem of hypertension among displaced peoples is even more prevalent as the numbers of refugees continue to increase due to higher rates of violence, natural disasters, and health inequities.

A specific goal of the project is to examine the feasibility of self-administered blood pressure monitoring through supportive healthcare infrastructure. The study hopes to show preliminary data that refugee patients can and prefer to take leadership over their hypertension management from where they are residing in combination with receiving guidance on medication titration plans from their healthcare providers.

In combination with BPM Connect, Drs. Al-Rousan and Godino’s teams collect patient data using Withings remote patient monitoring (RPM) solution. Both device and RPM help solve several pain points that participants may face such as interrupted healthcare access, economic hardship, language barriers, and varying levels of health literacy and numeracy. Regarding interrupted access, going to the doctor can be difficult for participants as some may have employment that does not allow for brief leave from work; since the device can be used at home, less time needs to be budgeted. BPM Connect also uses one button to take measurements which reduces potential language and use factors. Finally, any question of whether participants can access the internet has been assuaged using Withings Data Hub, a cellular gateway that requires no installation from users and securely connects retrieved data to the Withings RPM solution without requiring a smartphone or Wi-Fi.

The study includes 80 Aramaic and Arabic-speaking refugees with diagnosed uncontrolled blood pressure. Participants were recruited in consultation with ethnic community-based organizations in San Diego that serve refugees including Al Majdal Center and others. Multicultural and multilingual investigators with expertise in refugee health, digital health, epidemiology, and chronic disease prevention are involved in the team.

The study asks participants to measure their blood pressure three times a day every other day for four weeks. Qualitative interviews are being conducted before and after the intervention period to understand the levels of acceptability of remote monitoring and whether participants feel more in control, empowered, aware, and engaged in better quality healthcare. Questions on the role of social networks in health education and medication adherence are also asked about in this study.

“This project is revolutionary in that it is the first of its kind to be addressing the unmet need of uncontrolled blood pressure, a silent killer to millions all over the world, in one of the most understudied and underserved populations which is the refugee population.” — Dr. Al-Rousan

An observation the team has noted in the program are the results of two randomized groups — one that receives in-person education about how to use BPM Connect and the other that receives the same education virtually. The virtual education group has not only received the intervention smoothly but actually preferred it over in-person instruction which may be explained by fears of contracting COVID, or simply convenience and saving on transportation and other costs. Additionally, the use of the BPM Connect has extended beyond the intended four-week intervention period.

The ongoing pandemic has highlighted health disparities that vulnerable populations face. Drs. Al-Rousan and Godino hope that this study will show how innovative digital health solutions fit within patients’ feelings of acceptance while displaying that taking healthcare to marginalized people’s homes enables these populations to relate to their health providers, engage in healthier behaviors, and better manage chronic diseases.

The study is now in the end phase and results will soon be published. For questions, please contact Dr. Tala Al-RousanTo find out more about how institutions are using BPM Connect and other connected health devices with the Withings Data Hub, you can visit Withings.com.

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Remote patient monitoring (RPM) programs are beneficial for both patients and medical practices. But an RPM initiative’s success depends on the people behind the program. In this article, we look at why RPM programs have become so popular and the roles and responsibilities of an RPM team. To close, we share five easy-to-implement strategies for creating a strong RPM program.

Why RPM is Growing

The adoption rate of remote patient monitoring has grown dramatically in recent years. According to Insider Intelligence, 30 million patients in the U.S. will be using at least one RPM device by 2024. Here are six significant catalysts driving the rapid adoption rates of RPM technology.

COVID-19 pandemic

With much of the country brought to a standstill, the COVID-19 pandemic rapidly accelerated already emerging trends in virtual care. More insurers began covering telehealth services, dramatically increasing adoption. Remote patient monitoring devices allow medical professionals to monitor their patients’ key health metrics without having them come into the office, making RPM a significant value-add to a practice’s telehealth services.

Increase in chronic conditions such as diabetes

As the rates of long-term conditions such as heart disease, diabetes and obesity continue to rise in the U.S., remote patient monitoring devices empower patients and providers. RPM devices actively monitor key health metrics like blood pressure and weight, and the devices can be set to send data to the patient’s physician. These capabilities give patients and providers the longitudinal information they need to make changes that improve health outcomes.

Convenience

Work, family, and other obligations can quickly crowd out a schedule. RPM devices make it easy for patients to quickly take vital measures like blood pressure and weight. These measures can be automatically transmitted to the healthcare provider via cellular, WiFi, or Bluetooth connection and are instantly accessible to the patient via an easy-to-use mobile app.

Higher levels of patient care

Remote patient monitoring devices enable more frequent health measurements. With access to near real-time health data and the ability to observe historical trends in this data, healthcare providers can make better-informed care recommendations and treatment decisions.

Expand care to more diverse patient groups

For many patients, work schedules, child care or eldercare obligations, distance, or lack of reliable transportation are formidable barriers to receiving care. Low income, elderly, and patients living in underserved or rural areas can receive outsized benefits from participating in a remote patient monitoring program since it can reduce the number of office visits needed.

New revenue streams for healthcare practices

Because many RPM services are billable, RPM programs are a source of additional revenue, allowing practices to tap into new revenue streams that can improve overall profitability.

Key RPM Program Team Members

Building a strong, sustainable remote patient monitoring program requires teamwork and a shared vision. The following team members form the core of a successful remote patient monitoring program.

Top-level management

Beginning any new initiative requires the strong support and buy-in of top-level management. Healthcare executives play a key role in securing funding and staff resources, as well as providing the long-range vision needed to set a new remote patient monitoring program on a secure footing.

Physicians

Physicians can reap substantial benefits from using remote patient monitoring technology with their patients. With a wealth of patient health data, providers can make better-informed treatment decisions. Educating providers on benefits, obtaining their buy-in, and offering focused training on how to access remote patient monitoring data are essential for success.

IT support

The support of the IT department is crucial for ensuring that the technical aspects of creating and running a remote patient monitoring program are executed. Some remote patient monitoring providers like Withings Health Solutions handle most of the IT-related setup, freeing your tech support staff to focus their efforts elsewhere.

Patient navigator

Patient navigators help patients access and use their devices, troubleshooting issues that prevent them from making the most out of participating in a remote patient monitoring program. These staff members are one of the most critical components, providing front-line support and encouragement to patients as they become familiar with their new devices. Some connected devices, like those Withings Health Solutions offers, are intuitive and easy to use, making the jobs of patient navigators much simpler.

Digital health staff trainer

Staff trainers are responsible for training physicians and other practice staff involved in the program’s administration. Key topics for training include how to access and interpret patient data via the physician data dashboard and the correct use of RPM billing codes for payer reimbursement.

Medical billing representative

Medicare and many private insurers will pay for certain patient services provided via remote patient monitoring programs. Remote patient monitoring programs have their own unique set of billing codes, and the medical billing representative will ensure that the correct codes are being used on all claims filed.

Program coordinator

The remote patient monitoring program coordinator is responsible for overseeing the overall health of the program, managing the interactions between team members, troubleshooting patient and provider issues, and assessing program success based on predefined goals.

5 Tips for creating a stronger, more sustainable RPM program

Remote patient monitoring programs require careful planning and diligent follow-through during implementation in order for patients, providers, and practices to realize the full range of potential benefits this technology has to offer. These five tips can help you and the patients you serve get the most out of remote patient monitoring.

Clarify RPM program goals

First, defining what expect your remote patient monitoring program to accomplish. Clear goals not only sharpen the team’s focus but provide an objective set of criteria with which to measure program success.

Quantify expected cost/revenue metrics

Remote patient monitoring programs must be financially sustainable. Quantifying anticipated program costs and revenue enables teams to determine expected ROI. These metrics can justify the time and capital investments required for a successful launch. RPM can reduce overall costs, as it enables physicians to take preventative measurements before a condition becomes severe.

Engage the support of internal stakeholders

Top-level management, providers, and office support staff all have an important role to play in the success of a remote patient monitoring program. Gaining their support upfront is critical. If stakeholders aren’t engaged, program performance will suffer.

Invest the resources needed for program success

Engaging key personnel is an essential ingredient for ensuring long-term success, so additional staff members may need to be hired. Dedicating a program manager to oversee the effort ensures program continuity and provides a single point of contact for other team members when issues arise. Patient navigators are front-line workers who ensure patients are familiar with their devices and responsible for removing barriers to consistent use. Fortunately, the cost of hiring may be offset by billing and reimbursement for RPM services and/or lowered costs if the practice is part of a value-based care system.

Select a high-quality RPM provider to partner with

Some remote patient monitoring providers are better than others. Invest the time to research each potential partner, ensuring they offer higher quality, patient-friendly devices that are easy to use, an intuitive patient-facing health data app, and a streamlined practice-level program dashboard. The ideal RPM provider will have substantial industry experience and a track record of providing superior customer service.

Withings Health Solutions and Withings RPM: an All-in-One RPM Solution

Withings Health Solutions is committed to transforming the lives of healthcare consumers and professionals through beautifully simple monitoring solutions. Here’s how we make implementing a successful remote patient monitoring program seamlessly simple.

Effortless onboarding — Onboard your patients directly from the platform in 3 minutes or less.

Time-efficient monitoring — You’ll appreciate the one-click patient triaging through standard alerts and measurement plans.

Automatic time logging — Time spent taking care of your patients (when reviewing their charts or calling them) is automatically documented to streamline claim creation while maximizing revenue. Time spent outside the platform can easily be manually logged as well.

Optimized billing — In real-time, assess how much a CPT code can be billed and identify which patients to focus on. At the end of the month, generate comprehensive reports in one click to create claims including the CMS1500 information required for the billing.

Program dashboard — Manage your practice at a glance. A comprehensive dashboard allows care teams to view patients’ status, take action based on patient vitals and treatment plans, and easily bill for care rendered.

Patient application — The patient application allows the patient to visualize their measurements history, progress, and measurements objective. Login is simple and doesn’t require any signup or app download.

EHR integration — Withings RPM integrates with virtually every EHR to improve each step of the clinical workflow from device ordering to billing.

Learn more about Withings Health Solutions for remote patient monitoring.

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Refugees are a subset of the population that suffer displacement and other stressors, and once they reach their new home country, medical conditions including hypertension can go undetected and untreated. However, research into this very topic began in February 2021. The study entitled “Perceptions, Knowledge, and Attitudes Towards Hypertension Management among Refugees in San Diego” is being carried out by Dr. Tala Al-Rousan, a founding faculty member at the Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health at the University of California San Diego, in partnership with Dr. Job Godino who leads the Laura Rodriguez Research Institute at the Family Health Care Centers of San Diego.

Throughout the program, participants are using Withings BPM Connect, a smart blood pressure monitor, as well as the Withings Data Hub, a cellular gateway used to collect measurements. The study is funded by The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the US National Institutes of Health. It aims to contribute to a relatively small body of literature surrounding the unaddressed global challenge of uncontrolled blood pressure in displaced populations including refugees and asylum seekers. The problem of hypertension among displaced peoples is even more prevalent as the numbers of refugees continue to increase due to higher rates of violence, natural disasters, and health inequities.

A specific goal of the project is to examine the feasibility of self-administered blood pressure monitoring through supportive healthcare infrastructure. The study hopes to show preliminary data that refugee patients can and prefer to take leadership over their hypertension management from where they are residing in combination with receiving guidance on medication titration plans from their healthcare providers.

In combination with BPM Connect, Drs. Al-Rousan and Godino’s teams collect patient data using Withings remote patient monitoring (RPM) solution. Both device and RPM help solve several pain points that participants may face such as interrupted healthcare access, economic hardship, language barriers, and varying levels of health literacy and numeracy. Regarding interrupted access, going to the doctor can be difficult for participants as some may have employment that does not allow for brief leave from work; since the device can be used at home, less time needs to be budgeted. BPM Connect also uses one button to take measurements which reduces potential language and use factors. Finally, any question of whether participants can access the internet has been assuaged using Withings Data Hub, a cellular gateway that requires no installation from users and securely connects retrieved data to the Withings RPM solution without requiring a smartphone or Wi-Fi.

The study includes 80 Aramaic and Arabic-speaking refugees with diagnosed uncontrolled blood pressure. Participants were recruited in consultation with ethnic community-based organizations in San Diego that serve refugees including Al Majdal Center and others. Multicultural and multilingual investigators with expertise in refugee health, digital health, epidemiology, and chronic disease prevention are involved in the team.

The study asks participants to measure their blood pressure three times a day every other day for four weeks. Qualitative interviews are being conducted before and after the intervention period to understand the levels of acceptability of remote monitoring and whether participants feel more in control, empowered, aware, and engaged in better quality healthcare. Questions on the role of social networks in health education and medication adherence are also asked about in this study.

“This project is revolutionary in that it is the first of its kind to be addressing the unmet need of uncontrolled blood pressure, a silent killer to millions all over the world, in one of the most understudied and underserved populations which is the refugee population.” — Dr. Al-Rousan

An observation the team has noted in the program are the results of two randomized groups — one that receives in-person education about how to use BPM Connect and the other that receives the same education virtually. The virtual education group has not only received the intervention smoothly but actually preferred it over in-person instruction which may be explained by fears of contracting COVID, or simply convenience and saving on transportation and other costs. Additionally, the use of the BPM Connect has extended beyond the intended four-week intervention period.

The ongoing pandemic has highlighted health disparities that vulnerable populations face. Drs. Al-Rousan and Godino hope that this study will show how innovative digital health solutions fit within patients’ feelings of acceptance while displaying that taking healthcare to marginalized people’s homes enables these populations to relate to their health providers, engage in healthier behaviors, and better manage chronic diseases.

The study is now in the end phase and results will soon be published. For questions, please contact Dr. Tala Al-RousanTo find out more about how institutions are using BPM Connect and other connected health devices with the Withings Data Hub, you can visit Withings.com.

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Withings On-The-Go

Our patient-centric care solution utilizes portable Withings cellular devices that are not tied to a single patient. Instead, care teams can use one device to collect and transmit data for an unlimited number of individuals. The integrated cellular connectivity automatically directs the data into the correct patient’s medical record, simplifying data collection and improving care delivery regardless of the setting.