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    Home»Business»This health startup will create a weekly podcast just for you—starring your bloodwork
    Business

    This health startup will create a weekly podcast just for you—starring your bloodwork

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteJune 9, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    We’re inundated with data, but for many people, finding a way to make sense of it is elusive.

    But when it comes to health data, one company thinks it’s found a way to help: with weekly, AI-generated personal podcasts for users, updating users on their latest health and fitness statistics, sleep performance, and more.

    The podcasts are the latest product offering from Eternal, a health and longevity startup geared toward avid athletes, which combines various services like body scans and bloodwork and turns them into personalized reports and readouts.

    The company emerged in early 2025 after a $13.25 million seed round led by Lightspeed Venture Partners. It allows its customers to connect wearables or upload their lab data to get started.

    Health data is compiled and analyzed over time, allowing for the platform to track changes and update users on their progress toward various health goals, such as losing weight or getting better sleep.

    And users can now listen to a short, weekly “audio experience” to get their latest updates.

    Eternal was founded by Alex Mather, who previously founded the sports news publication the Athletic, which sold to the New York Times in 2022.

    The new venture, Mather told Fast Company, is a way to meld his editorial background with the world of health and fitness, of which he is particularly passionate.

    “It started with labs—we’d take a blood lab or DEXA scan, Mather says, “and we saw very few folks going in depth on the reports that we sent them. We were creating so much content for them, and they weren’t consuming it.”

    That, he says, was a revelation.

    “We quickly realized that most people want a story or a narrative,” Mather says. “They don’t want to look at numbers.”

    Thinking back on his experience of creating and launching successful podcasts during his time at the Athletic, Mather got an idea. “What if we could combine a health and fitness podcast into something more personalized? We had the first step,” he says.

    Get it on Mondays

    Eternal has now rolled out the new feature, and with users connecting their wearable or updating their lab work over the course of the week, they’re able to get their own personalized audio experience on Monday mornings.

    The content focuses on six core areas—sleep, movement, strength training, cardio training, and recovery—and is supplemented by chat features that prompt or ask users about how they’re feeling and other topics over text.

    The platform takes it all in, analyzes it, and uses AI to produce a corresponding, personalized audio experience.

    The feature comes as companies across sectors are experimenting with novel ways to deliver content to users with help from generative artificial intelligence. Amazon, for instance, has introduced AI-generated shopping podcasts and audio features relating to product descriptions and reviews. 

    While there may be cause for concern related to AI hallucinations or inaccuracies in a user’s readout, Mather says the company is constantly refining its evaluation framework to help minimize incorrect information and unsupported claims.

    Regarding privacy, Eternal says the podcasts are not publicly searchable or discoverable, and are securely delivered directly to the user. Further, the company says that no identifiable information beyond the user’s first name is shared. 

    As for whether people actually like it, Mather says that the feedback the company has gotten so far has been positive.

    It’s a passive way to absorb the information, he says, which doesn’t make a health update feel like a lecture or a chore, and it’s quick—around five minutes.

    “We wanted to get people engaged with their health data in a meaningful way,” says Mather. And now, “the priority for us is to scale this idea out.”



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