STAT September 29, 2021
Maddie Bender

A new study that infected willing participants with common cold and flu viruses provides the most rigorous evidence yet that wearable health monitors could predict infections, even before a person starts experiencing symptoms.

If the wearables can similarly predict infections in real-world conditions, the technology could add to existing disease surveillance and testing methods. But unresolved issues with standardizing wearables and testing them on diverse populations raise questions about their immediate utility.

The new study, published Wednesday in JAMA Network Open, took aim at a research problem that has plagued other efforts to study wearables as infection detectors: small sample size. In two previous studies that looked at wearable devices like Apple Watches and Fitbits, tens of thousands of enrolled...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Digital Health, Technology, Wearables
Your Earphones And Headphones As Health And Medical Devices
Wearable Devices for Parkinson’s Disease: The Future Is Here
Wearable electrical nerve stimulation device eases long COVID pain and fatigue, say researchers
Singapore tackling chronic diseases with wearables
Researchers use fitness tracker data and machine learning to detect bipolar disorder mood swings

Share This Article