
The Care Girl Podcast
The Care Girl Podcast
Redefining Proactive Health with Danae Moya: The Future of Stem Cell Innovation
Embark on a transformative journey with Danae Moya,MBA the visionary co-founder and CEO of Delphistem, as she unveils how her groundbreaking company is redefining the future of proactive health. Prepare to be captivated as we discuss the life-altering potential of cryo-stored induced pluripotent stem cells, derived from a simple urine sample, and the forthcoming genetic screening service poised to revolutionize preemptive disease prevention. Danae's passion for blending the science of longevity with the art of living well will inspire you to embrace a more holistic approach to aging, where nutrition, stress management, and social connections are as vital as the latest scientific innovations.
Get an insider's look into the entrepreneurial spirit as Danae shares the joys and challenges of building a cutting-edge health company with her husband scientist Noel Moya. Learn about Delphistem's pioneering technology that promises not just to maintain, but optimize health through early detection of genetic concerns. This conversation reaches beyond the typical health narrative, giving you a glimpse into a future where your stem cells could be the key to personalized medicine, and where proactive health strategies are the norm, not the exception. Join us and be part of a dialogue that could very well shape the trajectory of your health, and ultimately, your life.
Danae Moya can be found online at https://www.delphistem.com/
The Care Girl as an official referral partner contact us at workwithme@thecaregirl.com for interest in investing or to subscribe to the program.
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Hello guys, welcome to the Care Group Podcast Today. I have a lovely, amazing woman here today with me. She has an amazing company alongside her husband and I just cannot wait to get inside of her story on how she's saving lives and I just want to hear all about all of the things.
Speaker 2:Please introduce yourself to us yeah, so hi, I'm danai moya um, and I'm the co-founder and ceo of delphi stem.
Speaker 1:And great to see you, alexandria, and and I'm so glad to be here today so I, um, I met you last year at an investor pitch, um, and I and I asked you I believe I actually all then like, hey, I gotta get y'all on a podcast and it was like totally brand new then. So, circle back around this year. I see you all are making strides in the company and, and, um, all of that, can you give me a rundown of, like what, what's happening right now and today? And then we'll go back to how it all started? Yeah, sure, so, yeah, that's right. It's been a bit over a year that we met and, um, I remember in our conversation you immediately today and then we'll go back to how it all started.
Speaker 2:Yeah, sure. So yeah, that's right. It's been a bit over a year that we met and I remember in our conversation you immediately got the vibe, the vision of the company, and that was really exciting. So Delphi Stem is a biotech company. It's on stem cell science and genetics and we believe the reason why we built the company is because we want to help people proactively, help their health, have a proactive mindset to health, rather with stem cell storage and genetic screening, and that can help them live a long, healthy life and achieve longevity. So we soft launched earlier this year our stem cell storage service and that's when we reconnected and that basically means people have the opportunity to store their stem cells while they're young and healthy in order to use them later in life or both for preventive and personalized reasons, and now we're about to launch our genetic screening services. It's going to go live next week and that's why we're excited to connect today to share that with you and your listeners.
Speaker 1:Awesome. So tell me more about the genetic screening. Is this a screening like where you're going to find out, like if you have any underlying diseases that could come up, or your family lineage, or how does it?
Speaker 2:work A little bit, yeah, so it's more about giving you insights about the risk level that you might have to certain diseases and conditions, and we have three, kind of like three, levels. You know the basic, that includes the most critical conditions, and then a more extended one and an advanced, that is, a fully comprehensive genetic screening, and basically what that does is it gives you information on the hereditary risk that you might be carrying from your family, like you just said, and that's in your genes, right? But you don't necessarily have anything. We only discover when we have something. We have symptoms Right when we have something. If we have symptoms right, by having that knowledge you can take the appropriate steps to hopefully prevent that condition from manifesting in your life. So it's more about having the information, having that insight that you can share with your medical doctor and take better care of your health and just be mindful about that as we all grow older.
Speaker 1:So I know a lot of the women are going to want to know can you reverse aging?
Speaker 2:That's the million dollar question, right? I mean, you know it's funny because it's a very, it's a very hot topic and it's very interesting to see the different perspectives out there. But what is reverse aging? To begin with, right, we need to define what is the goal that we're looking for. If it's only aesthetics, that's one way to look at it. But if it's about being in a better, you know, in a better shape, feeling better, living your life in a better way, having stamina, all of those things is obviously a combination of things. Everybody wishes there was a magic pill.
Speaker 2:But we always talk about the three pillars to longevity. So the first pillar that we're all familiar with is the nutrition and lifestyle. So obviously the way we eat, whether we exercise or not, plays a huge role. The second pillar that we always talk about is the you know the level of stress, the kind of lifestyle that you have, if it's hereditary, if you're social, if you meet with your family, with know the level of stress, the kind of lifestyle that you have, if it's hereditary, if you're social, if you meet with your family, with friends, with loved ones, that really helps in your health. And the third pillar that we talk about is the taking advantage of scientific advancements right, and that includes everything that you might hear of or scientific you know both scientists and people in the wellness industry might be working towards. So if you do all three, I don't know about reversing aging, but for a hundred healthy years sounds pretty good to me, yeah.
Speaker 1:You need to move the term to gracefully aging, exactly Because I think that you know a lot of the aesthetic piece, like you know. I know I get it. You know you got the Botox and the fluids. I think a lot, of a lot of the women don't really research, you know. Hey, how is this going to interact with my body type and my inside?
Speaker 1:You know we're worried about a look versus like hey, internally I, you know, I may need to take some different vitamins, I may need to do some genetic testing to see, because you may have some other things going on that you don't know. All we're worried about is the aesthetic side. I like that. I like the overall holistic approach. It's scientific. I would say that you all are taking because it is about longevity and living a good life and healthy, because we know people that are living. They're living but they're not living a healthy life. They're constantly sick, they're going through different mental problems. Do you think that like bipolar or schizophrenia, can that be kind of discovered at all early on?
Speaker 2:I mean it's interesting. You mentioned a couple of really interesting points there. First of all, I couldn't agree more with you about, you know, taking temporary actions. Everybody likes, you know, the instant gratification element. But we need to look about long term. What are the things that we can do to help our health in the long term? So yeah, the examples you mentioned are ephemeral on the aesthetic side, but if we do take good care of our skin, of our body, of our well-being, you will be surprised. I'm sure. We've all seen people that look amazing and you wouldn't believe how old they are.
Speaker 2:Now on to your second part of your question. It's a little bit more complex. So neurological disorders like schizophrenia, from my understanding it could be hereditary. There might be a genetic factor in it, the marker. I don't know what is the level of the extent of that, so that's probably a question for Dr Noel. But to answer your question, it's good to have the understanding of our neurological predispositions and level of risk that we might carry in our genes so that we know, with the help of our medical doctor, what kind of lifestyle we should be mindful of having and caring so that those wouldn't manifest Most neurological disorders or mental disorders, I would say, from what I understood, they could be managed, but the more extended ones like schizophrenia. I think that's something that has to be discussed with the experts because it's at a different kind of market. I don't know if that explains it well. At a different kind of market.
Speaker 1:I don't know if that explains it well. Okay, sorry about that. So what type of diseases can genetic testing uncover that really you can see very effective if you get ahead of it.
Speaker 2:That's a very good question. So that is the reason we put together the different plans. So in the basic plan is about 24 diseases, not just diseases and conditions, including our ancestry. A lot of basic plan is about 24 diseases, not just diseases and conditions, including our ancestry. A lot of people are curious about that and we wanted to make sure that if somebody only wants to go for the basic plan to have the highest risk or the most critical conditions that you would want to know, so for example, for women, we make sure that breast cancer is included.
Speaker 2:For men, men is a prostate, because those two are the ones that are, you know they're having the higher number of statistics. Then in the um kind of in the extended plan, we included some of the neurological disorders, because this is a condition and a question that comes up a lot with the people that we talk about. And then the extended plan, that is, a full, comprehensive plan, is 72 conditions and conditions and diseases and that includes, you know, blood related disorders like leukemia, lymphoma, things that are quite serious, but the statistics are not as high as the top disease that we talked about. So the way we place the different plans is depending what is your interest in and what is more critical to you, um, and, and to make sure that you know it caters to all needs of people.
Speaker 1:Okay, I love that. I love that. Um so, how did this all start? I know I read your bio and I pretty much asked you in person, kind of like how this all started. Um, so, take me back to your college times and meeting, meeting noel and all that good stuff and just kind of like like, how did this? Like, how did you guys birth this baby?
Speaker 2:yeah, yeah, so we. You know it's this serendipitous thing I often refer to, to steve jobs speech in stanford in the early 2000s that he talks about like everything makes sense looking back and I always make that reference because looking back it all makes sense how we all got together, so as when we met and we talked about. I finished high school and college here in Michigan. I went back. I grew up in Greece, I was born and raised in Greece, so I finished high school, college here in Michigan. I went back to Europe. I did my first masters. Then for about four years I relocated to Dubai in the Middle East for almost 10 years and I worked in different organizations, mostly in-house in the corporate world, and then a professional opportunity brought me to Germany.
Speaker 2:That's where I met Noel and you know, initially, when we first met, we were talking about, you know, our dreams and passions and all of that. And, as you know, he's a stem cell scientist. He's been doing this all his career. He's a doctor, he's been published, so all of that. But for me stem cell science was something that was a little bit new. I knew a little bit, but you know, not to the extent that I know now. So when he explained to me the life saving potential that this technology has and the fact that it's mostly in the academic and you know research circles I circles I was blown away. I was like people need to know about this More, people need to know about this and people need to be able to benefit from this technology. I think when we met I told you my mother had leukemia. It was a very traumatic experience. Anybody that has had a family member you know experience. Any kind of cancer is super, super traumatic. That's common and luckily she survived.
Speaker 2:But when I but you know, when we were talking about about how the whole approach to cancer is today, I understood that with stem cell technology, the whole experience could have been very different. She could have had tailored treatments to her instead of trying different things and having everything that. You know, people experience. I don't want to get emotional, but people experience when they go through those kind of treatments and you know, a light bulb went off and we said why don't we connect? And, you know, merge our skills and bring this to life and help other people?
Speaker 2:You know he lost his father to cancer, so this is something that is very personal, not just for us and our families, but practically every person we speak to. Every person has a similar story and, as heartbreaking as it is, it's very motivating for us to push things forward and bring this to public and make it accessible and affordable, because you hear about scientific advancements and people already think everything is in the thousands. We made a stem cell subscription service accessible at $39 a month Like that's the cost of a lunch a month and we did this on purpose, right? People were telling us no, you don't have a different. No, we, we want, if somebody wants to do this out of pocket. We want them to be able to do it.
Speaker 1:Right and I think that that will impact and change a lot of lives, because just being able to get ahead of you know a potential threat to your life. You know living it can actually help you, your children. So how does that process work of storing the stem cells? Can you give us a little, because it's in my head? I'm just like how does this work? How does that work?
Speaker 2:Yeah, no sure, of course it's so easy. Basically, we just collect the urine sample. We have a kit that, once you register on our website, wwwdelphistepcom, you receive the kit in the registered address, your home or wherever you choose to receive it at. You collect your sample, you send it back to us here and once we receive it we start the process of reprogramming the urine cells into inducive pluripotent stem cells. That's the scientific process that goes behind the scenes and that takes a few weeks. So once that's that process is complete, you get notified that you know everything is done and now your stem cells are frozen for life.
Speaker 1:Oh, oh, wow, so that process. What's the price point for that? Is it different price points?
Speaker 2:Yeah, so the stem cell storage. The plans we have is a monthly plan at $39 a month, an annual plan $399 a year, so you get two months off. And we just introduced recently a lifetime plan and that was a result of a lot of people asking for it, that they just wanted to pay one time and not think about it, store their stencils for life. And the lifetime plan is $9,999. So it depends what age you are and where you are in your life. When you do the math it really makes sense. And we also have an installment plan of 12 different payments to the lifetime plan, again to make it accessible and easier for people to do it if they want to do that, that plan okay, so.
Speaker 1:So, so how they store oh how, how so it's actually.
Speaker 2:I wish I could show you the lab.
Speaker 1:So the after the you guys are open. I'm feeling that's going to be my next part of coming through. You're going to come? Yeah, we've been talking about this.
Speaker 2:You'll be visiting the next, for sure. So yeah, the whole process takes place in the lab, right? So once the cells have been reprogrammed into induced pluripotent stem cells, they are cryo-stored. So we have right here, in the same place, in the same facility, they're cryo-stored, so they're basically frozen and then if you need to access them in the future, for whatever reason, then you know the science team will go through the process of thawing them. If you need them for a particular organ, they will be reprogrammed towards an organ, and that is obviously a different process and service. But if that's what you need to do alongside with your medical doctor, everything can be done in-house. And that's the beauty of it, right? That we are able to do everything in-house.
Speaker 1:So give me an example of when you would use the stem cell that you have stored. Let's say's say, you know, for you or a family member, yeah, um, that like how would this, how would this help in that moment?
Speaker 2:yeah, great question. Um, it would probably be just for you.
Speaker 2:I don't know if it would be applicable for a family member, but that's not a question exactly and we recommend that, by the way, especially if you know that there have been hereditary diseases in your family. That's our recommendation. So let's say knock on wood. You know you store your stem cells today and you know, a few years down the line you happen to get sick or you happen to be facing a condition. And if your doctor is considering a number of different medications for you, the way they normally go about it today, they just kind of go empirically. So they say I have four different medications, let's go ahead and start with medication number one, see how your body's responding to it and if you're doing well, you carry on. If not, we try another one. And you're nodding because we've all been through that experience and it doesn't have to be a serious disease. But it's anything that we go to the doctor for. We try any medication and that might not work for us or it might.
Speaker 2:Now, in more serious cases, the harsher medications, like chemotherapy for example. They're very harsh, like the side effects, the toxin accumulation in the body. It's some people and some bodies cannot even take it. So what we want to offer is if your doctor is recommending or is considering rather different medications for you, instead of you having to try those medications and see what works. What we can do is we can test, we can do an efficacy and toxicity assessment test here on the three, four medications your doctor is considering on your own stem cells. So the condition that you're facing is, I don't know, in the kidney, in the liver, whichever organ we would have to reprogram your cells into or differentiate the cells into the organ in question and then test the different medications and see how you would respond to it in the lab and give that data to your doctor and then your doctor can make a better assessment, or you know, with a higher likelihood, of which medication would have higher likelihood of working better for you and then they would probably prescribe that one.
Speaker 1:That's OK. Ok, no, that makes sense. That makes sense. So you're kind of like getting a better view of, like the chemistry between you and that medication, and if it would even help.
Speaker 2:That's one way to look at it. Yeah, because basically we want to avoid being our own guinea pigs.
Speaker 1:We want to avoid unnecessary toxin accumulation in our bodies from any source or any direction, and that is one very effective way to go about it from any source or any direction, and that is one very effective way to go about it Understandable, understandable, I think I kind of now I'm kind of getting the full, the full, the full view of, I'm kind of getting the full picture of everything and I want to, I want to touch on you know how strong you are and how many years did this take to really like come to?
Speaker 2:life. Like, how long have y'all been working on this project? Yeah, it depends what you count as a starting point, right? So noel has been doing this all his career. Uh, he's been stem cell scientist. He's worked in different labs from california to germany, so, uh, that it had. He had to have had that experience to be able to be where we are today.
Speaker 2:But building DelphiSTEM as a company, we've been working on it for more than two years. We officially started the company two years ago. We started building it behind the scenes. Luckily, thanks to all of our angel investors, we were able to get our own lab here. The equipment you know how it is with scientific equipment they're costly, they're bulky, so you need the space and the resources to be able to do this. So we were. We built the company. In the last two years we've been building and testing everything because the protocols are, you know, scientific lingo right. So the scientific work has always been kind of like, similar.
Speaker 2:But it's very important for noel to complete all the the work in our lab and the scientists that he's collaborating with to do everything in-house, because we wanted to see all the processes before we go live and, after building it for two years. We decided to soft launch this year, like I said earlier, because we wanted to make the stem cell subscription service as soon as possible, because we believe that the earlier you store your stem cells, the better for you. So we didn't want to wait until everything is in place in terms of all the other services that we have in the roadmap. So we soft launched with a stem cell subscription service. The genetic service was in the roadmap for later in the year, but luckily we were able to advance a little bit quicker. So that's why now we're in the position to launch our genetic services. Yeah, by next week it will be publicly out.
Speaker 1:I love that. I love that. So you know I'm a caregiver. So I always ask, especially my women, how do they take care of themselves? And I would love to get a take on how you do it. I know you have a new baby. Congratulations on that. How old is the girl, right?
Speaker 2:She's a girl. Yeah, thank you.
Speaker 1:She's about to turn eight months, oh my goodness, and you're launching all these new things Like so how do you take care of yourself and how do you show up as a mother, as a wife, and still able to show up as a COO, and you're doing all these things. Give us a little bit of insight on that.
Speaker 2:You know, I think and you might be able to relate to this too but I think, once you find your purpose and your calling, you're so driven and so motivated by what you're building and what you're doing. You're changing people's lives, you're contributing, you know, to the greater good in our communities, and it feels similar, it feels like this for me. I feel like I'm so passionate about what we're building and how we can make a positive change in our communities and in the world, really with what we're bringing to the public, that I'm laser focused in making that a reality. Now, how do I take care of myself, or how do I go about my? You know my different hats in my life as a mother, as a wife, as an entrepreneur.
Speaker 2:It's been super intentional, I think, especially for us women. We are, you know, we're trying always to juggle so many things at the same time, but if we are intentional, mindful and selective, then we can do, you know, the best we can in the things that we are focusing on. You cannot please everybody. You cannot be everything to everyone all at the same time. So you need to prioritize and see what matters to you most and give to everyone all at the same time. So you need to prioritize and see what matters to you most and give it your all. Basically, that's how I look at it I love that.
Speaker 1:I love that. I love that well, because I I know, um, I know I saw you with the baby and I was like this is so, this is so amazing. I love it. I love to see families and you know, and this is being alive and just being created and you're staying in that creation mode and I just I really, I really love that. Give me three things that your family would describe.
Speaker 2:Give me three, three words that they would describe you as oh, um, I think they would definitely describe me as as ah, that is so hard Driven, you know, driven I can definitely see that.
Speaker 2:Positive. That's something that that has been. Yeah, a lot of people have been giving me that and driven positive. And, you know, positive, optimistic I don't want to use the same term optimistic and hopeful about the future. A lot of people get bogged down really easily, but there's so much good, so much to to hope for and to be optimistic about, so that's something that I'm really big on Don't get, don't let the negative stuff bring you down, type of thing. And a third I would say resourceful, and I think that is also a testament with Delphi STEM.
Speaker 2:It has to be resourceful and we had to be very lean, so that is something that I I can. Yeah, I think that's a good quality.
Speaker 1:I love that because I think that you know a good quality. I love that because I think that you know when, when someone meets a man, he's a doctor, he's this, he's that, um, you automatically correlate a certain lifestyle, um, versus like being resourceful, because you know there's a vision there and you have to kind of like you, you as a woman, of course, if you are, if you believe in that vision, you you kind of multiply that vision and I think it's kind of a it's a, it's kind of a lost call. It's not a lost cause, but it's kind of lost in our generation today. Um, because a lot of women, they want a man who like, oh, he already is there, like I don't want to have to work in the business, I don't want to have to do all of that, you know. So I think think that you're an example of, you know, a woman good expression, a woman who is innovative and is an inspiration. And I think that the reality of entrepreneurship is hard. You got to be a little crazy, it is hard.
Speaker 2:You gotta be a little crazy. It is hard, but you know, I think. Thank you, by the way, for saying those nice things I think it's more. It also has to make sense, right In our case, and it wasn't the plan when we met to really end up like co-founding the company together, it was more like I can help you with my skillset, because that was already partly his vision. Like, not, his vision was to bring this technology to the public.
Speaker 2:Now, how it got to it, to the way it is today, it was the combination of both our vision and our skill set. But I think in our case and I don't know about other people but our skill set has been complementary because for me I was always more in the marketing, business operation side of the corporate world, so I didn't have one particular, I had a product, I had a service, I went from fashion to furniture. It's not that I was only having one thing, but all that experience from different industries kind of gave me all this skill set. That has been super helpful to where we are today. So we are complementing each other in areas that is necessary for the company to be where it is today, and I think that that might be also the case in our personal life, but we work well together in the way we are, so it's not a dynamic that.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I feel like the dynamic is very well balanced and it just happened. For some people it happens like this. For others it might be more. You know, you make an effort to get there, but we're both very glad to be here because we see the value that we both bring to the company, to where it is and to bring the whole vision to life. We have more things in the pipeline and the roadmap, so we want to make sure all that comes forward, um and is available to people yeah, and there's the next energy.
Speaker 1:That energy matters and I think that this is, this is definitely it's so many different angles that you, you all, are coming from and this is this is going to be, you know, a trillion dollar company. You know, I, I see it, I see it in you, um, and I just I really believe in the vision. Like I said, when I, when I spoke to you all about it and I, you know, heard everything, the presentation you did, I just like it blew me away, um, but it's, it was born and now you know, it's walking around and and I can't wait to I going to, definitely I want to try it myself and kind of, like you know, documenting for others and you know, maybe become an affiliate for you all.
Speaker 1:I would love to do that, and you know when labs open are you in. Atlanta still.
Speaker 2:Yeah, we are in Atlanta, we are in North, yeah.
Speaker 1:Perfect, so people can do this from all around. Or will they have to come in town and do it? Perfect, so people can do this from all around, or will they have to come to town and do it no?
Speaker 2:Yeah, that's. That's a good question, because that's another beauty and another milestone we were able to achieve earlier. So initially, I think when we met, we were saying that it would be, you know, starting out for Atlanta Southeast. Now we were able to hit another milestone earlier that we have created kind of like a supplement that comes with a kit, and we are able to maintain the, because, you know, let's start from the beginning.
Speaker 2:So the urine sample collection and urine urine, the health industry. So you know that the cells can only stay for so long right. So that's why you need to collect the fresh sample and start the process. Now we were able to complete all the scientific work in order to prolong the life of the cells and with the kit you receive a supplement, so that way we can send the kit and receive it from any part of the world Sorry, the country, no, the country. So we've had clients from Chicago, texas, from California we got a few weeks ago. So we are able to receive the sample in great shape from any part of the continental US. And that's another milestone we hit early.
Speaker 1:And that's why we're able to cater to everybody. That's very helpful. Have you guys had any case studies so far to where there's been something discovered that could save someone, or is it pretty early in the venture? I didn't hear that part. If we discovered, which part? Do you all have any case studies to where you may have discovered something that somebody needed to be aware of in their genetics?
Speaker 2:Yeah, so the genetic screening services were launched.
Speaker 1:That's new right. Okay, that's new.
Speaker 2:Yeah, so we're launching that next week, um, but we we are not going to that, you know, without having the client requested um. But we know that there are case studies that has been, uh, very like. The stem cells have been used. Uh, we actually put a post on our socials I think it was last week where there has been different case studies of people that benefited. So a paralyzed man was able to walk again by using stem cells.
Speaker 2:There was a cornea transplant, I think, in Japan that they were able to see again. There was with diabetes. There was another case of acute type A diabetes. So there are already so many cases that are coming on the surface and even that is a bit earlier than we were both expecting. We were expecting it to come in the coming years, but already this year there is case studies of stem cell therapies being successful. So the technology, you know everything is evolving, but everything is happening in real time and that's why we want people to benefit from storing their stem cells early in their adult life. And you know, then you have that peace of mind for how things evolve in your life. You know you have a backup. Some people call it like a biomedical insurance and that's kind of what it is.
Speaker 1:I love that. I love that. I think that we covered a lot here and I definitely, I think I'm just going to be continuing to follow everything that you're doing. I'm just going to be I'm continuing to follow everything that you're doing and, um, I definitely want to uh, be an instrument for you all, um, as I go along my journey as the care girl and and um talk, because that this is something that I think is is life changing, and I'm not just saying this, just to say this, um, but I really think it is because you, you have a lot of of I've, I've I've actually met with a stem cell company here in atlanta, but they are more aesthetics, so it's all.
Speaker 1:It's all centered around aesthetics and I'm just like, how is this really? You know helping, I get it, um, but I think that people really, really downplay, like you know, the, the inner part of like really being healthy and being able to prevent this and, like you said, being able to cure certain things by, um, storing those stem cells, like I didn't get that side of it at all. So I see that, I see that the get, get the money quickly side of it as far as like, hey, you're injecting it. You're doing different things to your lips.
Speaker 1:You know the stem cells can be used for different things you know, it can even be used for joint pain and things like that. This is the subscription model. This is extremely unique. I think you guys did an amazing job with this. I'm excited for you. I'm excited for you. I know you are busy over there marketing and doing all the things that you do. I really appreciate you coming on the show. I can't wait to get updates of more and more of what you all are doing and I can't wait to actually come and view the lab one day in Atlanta and get to expose more of you all.
Speaker 2:Yeah, thank you. Thank you so much for inviting me. It was great to be on and reconnect. Just a quick shout out we are still welcoming angel investors. If there is anybody in your listeners who want to be part of the next game changer in biotech, let us know, because we are only having people that really believe in the vision, that believe in what we're doing. We are the first company actually to bring stem cell technology in the way we do, in a non-invasive way, scientifically proven way, so we're very proud of that and we want to continue making that available and accessible to people. Um, so, yeah, we're here. We'll be happy to welcome you and reconnect and thank you again for having me on. It's been great.
Speaker 2:Where can everybody find you all online? So our website is wwwdelphistemcom, so it's D-E-L-P-H-I STEM, s-t-e-m dot com. All the information is on there. You can see, also on our frequently asked questions page, we have a lot of information of questions that come up, a lot. So that is, and we also have information on the genetic screening services there already live and, yeah, we. You can connect with us on our socials as well and we are here to answer any other questions that may come up.
Speaker 1:Awesome. Thank you so much and I hope you have a good rest of your day. Thank you, bye-bye. Thank you, bye.