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Oura Smart Ring review: Put a ring on your health
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Fitbit data suggests people with COVID-19 experience lingering health effects
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May 5, 2021 9:45am
Oura said it will continue to develop within new use cases focused on recovery, activity, illness, mental health and women’s health. Wearable technology also shows promise for helping manage sleep apnea and high blood pressure conditions. (Oura Ring)
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Oura Ring quickly shifted from being just a consumer wearable to a key research tool for early detection of COVID-19 symptoms.
Oura Health s wellness ring was one of the first wearables used by an academic research institution, the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), to potentially predict illness symptoms. The company also donated rings to front-line healthcare workers who were likely to be affected by the virus.
Long Covid mystery sparks a research revolution
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Photo by GE
Researchers at General Electric are set to begin research into how they can turn commonly-used surfaces into COVID-19-detecting devices, the company announced this week.
The GE Research team has received a 24-month grant from the National Institutes of Health to develop miniature sensors that can be embedded into mobile devices in order to detect COVID-19 particles on their surfaces.
“We all come into contact with different surfaces during any given day, from computer screens and conference tables to kiosks at the airport and, of course, credit card machines at stores while running errands,” Radislav Potyrailo, a principal scientist at GE Research and principal investigator on the NIH project, said in a statement.