The Guardian (USA)

Withings ScanWatch review: health-tracking watch with 30-day battery

- Samuel Gibbs Consumer technology editor

The new Withings ScanWatch is one of the most advanced health trackers you can buy and comes in the form of a hybrid smartwatch with a traditiona­l analogue face and a 30-day battery life.

The ScanWatch comes in two sizes, with either a black or white face. The 38mm size costs £249.95 but it is the larger 42mm size costing £279.95 that is reviewed here.

The new watch is the French tech firm’s latest in a line of hybrid smartwatch­es first launched in 2014. They all pack health tracking and a small amount of smarts, including smartphone notificati­ons, into attractive traditiona­l analogue timepieces that outlast all the true-smartwatch competitio­n on battery life.

The ScanWatch improves on health tracking with the addition of heart rate tracking and irregular pattern notificati­ons, electrocar­diogram (ECG), blood oxygen saturation, respirator­y tracking during sleep and longer battery life.

Gadget credential­s aside, the ScanWatch is extremely attractive. Available with white or black dials, it is the minimalist antidote to your traditiona­l smartwatch clutter, reminding me more of some of the extremely expensive luxury watches from Swiss and German firms.

The cover glass is made of sapphire, which is the scratch-resistant glass fitted to traditiona­l Swiss watches. The body is stainless steel and weighs 83g, which gives it a feeling of quality alongside the solid-feeling crown on the right side that acts as a digital control for the smart functions. Even the fluoroelas­tomer (think silicone-rubberlike) strap feels premium, although the watch takes standard 22mm bands so you can easily swap them out and Withings sells quite a few as accessorie­s.

The watch is comfortabl­e to wear for extended periods and did not get as sweaty as some silicone-strap watches can.

A small round digital screen is set into the watch face and handles the smart bits such as smartphone notificati­ons, timers and stopwatch functions, plus the manual readings needed for health functions such as taking an ECG. Everything else is handled by the Health Mate app on an Android or iPhone to which the watch connects via Bluetooth.

The watch is water resistant to 50 metres and ships with a felt transport pouch and a small magnetic USB charging puck that clips to the back.

Specificat­ions

Case size: 38 or 42mm

Case thickness: 13.2 or 13.7mm

Band size: standard 20 or 22mm Weight: 58g or 83g

Water resistance: 50 metres (5ATM) Sensors: HR, Sp02, 3 electrodes (ECG), ambient light, altimeter

Connectivi­ty: Bluetooth Low Energy

Battery life

Withings says the watch should last about 30 days of general use, which seemed about right in my testing. Not many smart wearables last anywhere near as long as that. You can effectivel­y forget about charging it.

Some features use up the battery faster than others. By default the watch will monitor your breathing overnight only occasional­ly as it consumes more battery and isn’t needed every night. You can set it to do so though, which by my estimation­s would reduce the battery life to about 10 days.

Likewise, frequent use of the ECG and blood oxygen saturation functions would also decrease battery life, but even performing them both twice a day the watch only dropped about 4% of the battery per 24 hours.

A full charge using the USB puck that clips onto the back with magnets takes about two hours, but hits 70% in a little over an hour if you’re in a hurry. The watch can also store up to five days of health readings without syncing with your phone.

Sustainabi­lity

The expected lifespan for the battery in the ScanWatch is 500 full-charge cycles, which with a long battery life about 30 days, should theoretica­lly last more than 40 years.

While the watch is designed to last with a stainless steel case and scratch

resistant sapphire screen, it is not currently repairable by Withings. The company did not comment on the use of recycled materials, recycling of old products nor trade-in schemes.

Smarts

The watch connects to your phone via Bluetooth and is managed by the Health Mate app, which also decides the apps that can send notificati­ons to your wrist for things such as calls and messages.

Notificati­ons vibrate on the watch and text quickly scrolls across the digital screen. There is no way to look back at previous notificati­ons or action anything from your wrist, so this is very much a quick nudge to say something important has happened on your phone.

I had a few disconnect­ion issues between the watch and an OnePlus 8 Pro Android phone, which required the watch to be rebooted to fix, but, generally, as long as I was checking my health stats in the Health Mate app regularly everything worked as it should. The ScanWatch will work just fine with an iPhone, too.

That’s it in terms of smart features. There is no music playback control or anything else you might expect from a true smartwatch. Every other function of the watch beyond time, timers, a wake-up alarm and stopwatch is dedicated to health monitoring.

Health and fitness

The ScanWatch records all the usual things you expect from a fitness tracker: steps, distance, floors climbed and calories. It also has comprehens­ive heart monitoring, including periodic heart rate recording, alerts for high or low beats per minute or other irregular patterns.

You can also manually take an ECG by activating it in the menu and then placing your hand over half of the watch for 30 seconds while sitting still. An ECG is used to spot irregular rhythms in your heart rate and is becoming an increasing­ly common feature in high-end smartwatch­es where it is useful for self monitoring for heart problems.

You can also manually record your blood oxygen percentage using the SpO2 sensor, which is used as a measure of respirator­y function, meaning that a low recording could indicate you have a problem with your lungs or that you are in a high-altitude environmen­t.

The watch will also automatica­lly track your sleep. Simply wear it overnight for it to record your heart rate, sleep duration and phases, quality, wake-ups and breathing disturbanc­es.

The watch performs what Withings calls a respirator­y scan, which uses the SpO2 monitor and other sensors to highlight issues such as sleep apnoea. The firm has a clinical study under way for validation of its sleep apnoea detection, so in the meantime it just records when a disturbanc­e has happened.

The respirator­y scan takes place automatica­lly overnight and on a routine basis, based on previously recorded data. The watch alerts you during the day if it will monitor your breathing overnight or you can set it to record it every night, which will reduce the battery life significan­tly.

The ScanWatch also has a smart vibrating alarm function that monitors your sleep cycle and wakes you up at the best possible time for you to feel refreshed. You set the time by which it it must wake you up plus a window leading up to it where it can wake you up early if the time is right.

The watch can automatica­lly record activities such as walking, running and swimming, measuring duration, calories and other relevant data such as Vo2 Max – a fairly common measure of cardioresp­iratory fitness. Other sports can be manually tracked, too, using the menu system. The watch lacks its own GPS for tracking routes, instead relying on your phone’s location system, which means the ScanWatch isn’t for serious running tracking but will be fine for the occasional bit of exercise.

Health Mate app

While you can see your heart rate or other metric at the time of measuremen­t on the small digital display on the watch, all the data is synced to and displayed within the Health Mate app, which is one of the best of its kind around.

It displays your latest measuremen­ts in a daily timeline with easy to interpret graphs and numbers. Tapping on them will show your history for each measuremen­t plus some fairly good explanatio­ns of what the figures and charts mean.

It also has a new health assistant that is a bit like a chatbot. It picks up on a notable event of the previous day and will chat through some things associated with it, such as advice on how to get to sleep quicker.

Overall, the Health Mate app does a better job of showing and explaining what is going on than most competitor­s and there are no add-on fees for any analysis.

Price

The Withings ScanWatch costs £249.95 in 38mm size and £279.95 in 42mm size.

For comparison, the Samsung Galaxy Watch 3 has an RRP of £399, the Galaxy Watch Active 2 costs £249, the Fossil Gen 5 costs £279, the Apple Watch Series 5 costs £399, the Garmin Forerunner 245 Music costs £299 and the Garmin Fenix 6 Pro Solar costs £739.99.

Verdict

The Withings ScanWatch is an extremely attractive traditiona­l watch that hides a unique combinatio­n of exceptiona­lly long battery life, a little bit of smarts and a lot of health monitoring.

Not many true smartwatch­es or fitness trackers contain quite as many health-monitoring features, from general activity to comprehens­ive sleep tracking. The Withings is particular­ly good for monitoring heart health with abnormal rate alerts and on-demand ECG becoming increasing­ly soughtafte­r by those concerned about their heart.

You also get smart alerts, which are basic but may be just enough for most people not after a full smartwatch experience. But the watch certainly isn’t cheap and costs about the same as many fully featured smartwatch­es or running watches, which admittedly lack the ECG functions. The lack of GPS also means you are stuck carrying your phone if you want to record a route.

The ScanWatch is an attractive alternativ­e to a smartwatch or fitness tracker for those who want comprehens­ive health tracking but with a touch of class.

Other reviews

Samsung Galaxy Watch 3 review: the new king of Android smartwatch­es

Samsung Galaxy Watch Active 2 review: the best smartwatch for Android

Fossil Gen 5 review: Google’s Wear OS smartwatch at its best

Garmin Forerunner 245 Music review: a runner’s best friend

Garmin Fenix 6 Pro Solar review: the solar-powered super watch

Apple Watch Series 5 review: the king of smartwatch­es

 ?? Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian ?? This good-looking analogue watch has comprehens­ive health tracking, smart alerts and only needs charging once a month.
Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian This good-looking analogue watch has comprehens­ive health tracking, smart alerts and only needs charging once a month.
 ?? Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian ?? The ScanWatch has a classic appeal that fits with a wide range of aesthetics; perfect for anything from casual clothes to black tie.
Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian The ScanWatch has a classic appeal that fits with a wide range of aesthetics; perfect for anything from casual clothes to black tie.

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