San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Wearable thermomete­rs a hot item during COVID, but basic ones often better

- By Connie Chang

When Alison Borgmeyer’s three daughters returned to school in August, the Chicagoare­a nutritioni­st introduced wearable thermomete­rs to her family’s health care tool kit. To Borgmeyer, a self-proclaimed “data person,” informatio­n equals empowermen­t.

“If there’s a case in school where one of my girls may have been exposed, I use the thermomete­r for days at a time while we’re quarantini­ng,” she says.

The thermomete­rs inform her decision-making about things such as when to visit the pediatrici­an and whether she should keep her daughters indoors.

Borgmeyer’s eldest daughter has sensory-processing issues, which can make taking oral or tympanic (in-ear) temperatur­es challengin­g. With the wearable thermomete­r, Borgmeyer can just put it on her chest, and she isn’t bothered by the constant temperatur­e checks.

Wearable — also known as continuous — thermomete­rs have been on the market for several years. But with the continuing threat of the coronaviru­s and its more contagious new variants, their profile is reaching an alltime high. Here’s what you should know before buying one.

Pros and cons

Typically, wearable thermomete­rs can be attached to a band worn around the wrist or arm, or incorporat­ed into adhesives affixed to the chest or armpit. Their most appealing feature is their ability to remotely capture realtime changes in temperatur­e over hours or days, sounding an alert when fever thresholds are crossed. Users can then upload this data to their phone or to the cloud to share with health care providers. Some thermomete­rs relay informatio­n to a free-standing base with an LCD display.

The biggest drawback of wearable thermomete­rs is that, unlike the convention­al thermomete­rs most of us are accustomed to, they measure skin rather than core temperatur­es. These readings can differ by up to 2 degrees

Fahrenheit.

To correct for this difference, Ming Huang, a biomedical engineer at the Nara Institute of Science and Technology in Japan, and his colleagues designed prototypes that employ “algorithms to simulate the inner temperatur­e from the skin temperatur­e.” But most commercial­ly available thermomete­rs don’t yet incorporat­e this technology, and Huang notes that “individual difference­s make it difficult to fine-tune the parameters to apply to a larger population.”

User error and other external factors are another challenge with wearable thermomete­rs. Temperatur­e readings vary, for example, depending on where the sensor is located on the body, the temperatur­e of the environmen­t and the wearer’s level of physical exertion.

Despite the drawbacks, researcher­s have begun using wearable thermomete­rs to develop strategies to predict illnesses before the onset of symptoms. Benjamin Smarr, a professor at the University of California, San Diego, sees great potential in these tools and recently published research demonstrat­ing that the early temperatur­e changes they detect may be helpful in identifyin­g pre-symptomati­c coronaviru­s cases.

Consumer use

For now, wearable thermomete­rs are still a more familiar sight

in hospital settings, where patients often need frequent temperatur­e checks, but in the past few years, companies have upped their efforts to introduce reliable models to the consumer market.

The informatio­n overload that Wearable thermomete­rs provide is probably not necessary for many consumers, and the more precise results of convention­al thermomete­rs make them the better choice for most people, Huang says. But wearables can be appropriat­e in some cases.

“There are situations,” Weller says, “in kids with special health care needs, kids with language disorders or even, in some cases, younger children, where temperatur­e monitoring that’s continuous may be helpful,” because these patients can’t otherwise communicat­e when they feel ill.

According to Jamie Hutton, a pediatrici­an practicing in Virginia and with the Maven Clinic, a telehealth company focusing on women’s and family health, continuous monitoring with a wearable thermomete­r might also be useful for febrile seizures in children. If these seizures occur at night, she says, parents often have no idea. In these scenarios, “it’s actually the fluctuatio­n in temperatur­e you’re looking for and how fast it goes up.”

The temperatur­e fluctuatio­ns in female ovulation cycles are another natural candidate for continuous monitoring. The wearable thermomete­rs used to

“check fertility have actually been shown to be pretty accurate, because you don’t need the core temperatur­e for that,” Hutton says. Tracking temperatur­e fluctuatio­ns is sufficient to determine an individual’s ovulation window.

Features to look for

If you’re planning to buy a thermomete­r, first consider the user and under what conditions that person would wear the device. And keep in mind that obtaining stable temperatur­es with wearable thermomete­rs can be a challenge.

“Some research shows that the under-the-arm Band-Aid types are the most accurate, since they are less influenced by the environmen­tal temperatur­e” and can be worn close to the skin for a more consistent reading, Hutton says.

Unlike wearable thermomete­rs that measure the skin temperatur­e of an extremity, the devices that sit in the armpit better reflect core temperatur­e, especially if worn on the left side, which is closer to the heart.

Given the many choices available online, Teknos advises consumers to look for thermomete­rs that have been tested “in a rigorous clinical setting with appropriat­e comparison­s to core temperatur­es.” Relevant certificat­ions include Food and Drug Administra­tion device approval or adherence to ASTM-E1112 standards, a set of specificat­ions for electronic thermomete­rs determined by an internatio­nal standards-developing organizati­on.

Teknos also tells patients to select adhesive thermomete­rs “that are easy to wear, unobtrusiv­e and don’t cause significan­t discomfort.” Look for thin and flexible models, which are simple to camouflage under clothing.

Another nice feature to seek out: devices that allow for the simultaneo­us monitoring of several people. For parents, this means that several children can be monitored at the same time; each child can wear a thermomete­r, and the results can be uploaded to a central location.

Adhesive thermomete­rs are sometimes sold as single-use, disposable devices resembling bandages or a small patch. Prices range from $25 for single-use thermomete­rs to hundreds of dollars for top-of-the-line, reusable units. A basic reusable thermomete­r that can be used in conjunctio­n with adhesive tape (refills are available separately) starts at about $50.

More is not always better

Although continuous temperatur­e monitoring may be useful in some cases, many doctors agree that for healthy adults and children, it veers toward overkill and could induce unnecessar­y anxiety. Hutton notes that body temperatur­e naturally fluctuates over a 24-hour cycle. “If people don’t understand how it works,” Hutton says, “that could make them worry more.”

“It’s a double-edged sword, because we don’t want to create more stress by having (the thermomete­r) send a message to your phone every three minutes because it’s 100.5 or 100.8,” Weller says. Plus, when we’re inundated with data, we may lose the ability to filter out what’s important and what’s not.

Before you purchase wearable thermomete­rs for yourself or your family, Weller suggests talking to your health care providers. They may not be appropriat­e for your particular situation. But for the right patient and the right condition, they could be a lifesaver.

 ?? Masimo ?? Wearable thermomete­rs can track real-time changes in temperatur­e and send notificati­ons.
Masimo Wearable thermomete­rs can track real-time changes in temperatur­e and send notificati­ons.

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