Following on from wireless weighing scales, blood pressure monitors and smartwatches designed to track health indicators, Withings SA is now developing home urine analysis products.
Digital health innovation was front and center at this year’s Consumer Electronic Show (CES) in Las Vegas. The four-day event included a major product announcement from Abbott Laboratories and a keynote presentation delivered by CEO Robert Ford. This marked the first time a health care company has been invited to take the main stage.
This year saw continued advances in smartwatches as they increasingly move from wellness assistants to medical monitors. Nowhere has that been clearer than in cardiovascular health, where multiple wearables now allow users to quickly detect atrial fibrillation, a notoriously shy condition previously only detectable in early stages by chance in a physician’s office or by wearing a cumbersome Holter monitor for 24 to 48 hours.
After nearly two years of waiting, Withings SA won FDA clearance for its Scanwatch, a smartwatch that can take an electrocardiogram and monitor for sleep disturbances indicative of sleep apnea or respiratory illnesses such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The FDA action makes the watch the first cleared for both functions.
Withings Health Solutions, the business-to-business division of the connected health company Withings SA, is launching two cellular-connected devices that allow patients to measure their weight and blood pressure at home and immediately transmit the results to a health care provider. The products – the Body Pro smart scale and the BPM Connect Pro at-home blood pressure monitor(BPM) – are being marketed directly to health professionals, as well as researchers and chronic disease management companies, for distribution to patients to use at home.
Paris-based health care startup Cardiologs Technologies SAS has launched a clinical study to assess the use of its artificial intelligence (AI) platform to remotely monitor cardiac safety in COVID-19 patients being treated with the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine. The study could help to detect and prevent serious cardiac effects of the drug.
Issy-les-Moulineaux, France-based Withings SA said it’s planning to launch its latest product in the U.S. and Europe during the second quarter, the Scanwatch. It is expected to be the first smartwatch to offer both atrial fibrillation (AF) and sleep apnea detection; a CE mark and FDA clearance are both pending. Cardiac arrhythmia and sleep apnea are associated with one another and can be precursors to more serious health problems such as heart attack or stroke.