Temasek Trust's C3H leads $1.2m injewelme funding round
Funding backs heat-stress detection and regional expansion.
Temasek Trust’s Catalytic Capital for Climate and Health has led a $1.2m funding round for Singapore AI healthtech injewelme to expand its contactless health-monitoring technology for climate-related health risks.
The round included participation from Richardson Family, a UK-based family office, and will support further development of injewelme’s DeepHealthVision technology, including new capabilities to test blood glucose, stress index, fatigue, and hydration.
The company said the funding will also back validation work with industry partners and new heat-stress detection features.
Injewelme said its proprietary system uses remote photoplethysmography and a regular camera to measure more than 20 vital health parameters, including heart rate, blood pressure, and oxygen saturation, in around 30 seconds without physical contact.
The company said the technology has delivered 95% detection accuracy in real-world pilots.
The technology has been trialled with SingHealth Polyclinics and private-sector partners in Singapore, and is being evaluated for wider use across healthcare, eldercare, insurance, and workplace safety.
Injewelme said the funds will also support customer acquisition in Singapore and expansion into new Southeast Asian markets.
C3H head Ryan Tan said rising climate-related stressors would increase physiological strain on individuals and communities.
Co-Axis, a digital impact marketplace, helped connect injewelme with C3H and Richardson Family, whilst C3H will also support the company through access to partners across the Temasek Trust ecosystem and wider industry networks.
SJ Integrated Solutions, a business line under SJ Group, said it has used the technology as a contactless pre-activity screening tool for seniors and cut screening time by about 50% compared with manual processes.
Injewelme founder and chief executive James Moon said the financing would help the company scale proactive, data-driven health monitoring and AI-driven preventive care.