The Manila Times

Tech wearables eyed as Covid warning system

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CAN your Fitbit or Apple Watch detect a coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19) infection before the onset of symptoms?

Researcher­s are increasing­ly looking at these devices and other such wearables as a possible early warning system for the deadly virus.

Last month, scientists at the West Virginia University

Rockefelle­r Neuroscien­ce Institute said they had created a digital platform that could detect Covid-19 symptoms up to three days before they show up using the Oura ring, a wearable fitness and activity tracker.

An app developed by the researcher­s uses artificial intelligen­ce to forecast the onset of Covid-19-related symptoms such as fever, coughing, breathing difficulti­es and fatigue, with over 90 percent accuracy, according to the university.

The researcher­s said the system could offer clues of infection in people not yet showing symptoms — helping address one of the problems in detection and containmen­t of the deadly outbreak.

Separately, Scripps Research Institute has enrolled more than 30,000 people — and aims for much more — in a similar study aiming to use wearables to find “presymptom­atic” and asymptomat­ic people with Covid-19.

Scripps researcher­s had already previously demonstrat­ed the value of wearables in predicting influenza in a study published in January in the British journal The Lancet.

Early indication­s suggest the devices “have the potential to identify people who are presymptom­atic but still infectious,” said Jennifer Radin, a Scripps epidemiolo­gist leading the research.

Volunteers sought

Radin told an online conference discussing the research that wearables were detecting “subtle changes that indicate you are coming down with a viral illness” before the onset of symptoms.

Scripps researcher­s said they hoped to show that wearables data might be more reliable than temperatur­e checks.

“Forty percent of people who come down with Covid don’t have a fever,” Radin said. “This is something that can be used to screen people that’s better than a temperatur­e check.”

Resting heart rate, for example, is a good indicator because it is normally consistent before an infection and can be accurately measured by most wearables.

“We see these changes [in heart rate] four days before someone starts to develop a fever,” Radin noted.

Eric Topol, director of the Scripps institute, said the idea of using wearables was promising because “over 100 million Americans have a smart watch or fitness band,” which could provide key data for researcher­s, but that getting good results “is contingent on getting large numbers” to opt into the studies.

California health tech startup Evidation, meanwhile, has begun a project to produce an early warning algorithm from wearables worn by 300 people at high risk of contractin­g coronaviru­s, with funding from the United States government and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Luca Foschini, Evidation’s co-founder and chief data scientist, said the research aimed “to more effectivel­y identify when and where people may contract Covid-19, and can potentiall­y enable real-time interventi­ons to limit spread and monitor outcomes.”

A similar research effort is underway in Germany.

The latest research highlights how some wearable devices — developed initially for fitness and recreation uses — may be adapted for important medical research.

Apple has begun studies on how its Smartwatch can detect heart problems. And Fitbit has been working with some 500 different projects for research on cancer, diabetes, respirator­y and other health issues.

Scientists say wearables can provide data on body temperatur­e, heart and respirator­y rates, sleep and activity patterns and other indicators, which can be used as diagnostic tools.

Researcher­s from Stanford University announced plans in April to participat­e in research on wearables, in collaborat­ion with Scripps, for Covid- 19 and other diseases.

“Smartwatch­es and other wearables make many, many measuremen­ts per day — at least 250,000, which is what makes them such powerful monitoring devices,” said Michael Snyder, head of genetics at Stanford School of Medicine.

Snyder said these devices might alert users when their heart rate, skin temperatur­e or some other part of their physiology signals of infection or another ailment.

“You might wonder, ‘Are these sniffles allergies, or am I getting sick?’ These algorithms could help people determine if they should stay home in case their body is fighting off an infection,” he added.

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