- Empirical Health has published a new smartwatch health protocol
- Empirical Health Radar uses more than 40 smartwatch biomarkers, combined with clinical results to give you a health score
- This can give you a deeper overview of heart health, kidney function, liver health and more
A new empirical health service promises to provide a complete health score using combined data from your smartwatch and clinical files.
Available from March 11, Empirical Health Radar (without affiliation with Techradar) cannot be found in the Empirical Health application on Android and iOS.
Empirical Health Radar takes 40 biomarkers from your Smartwatch Apple Watch or Wear OS, and combines data with blood tests to generate a health score designed by the doctor.
The health score was designed by Dr. Rodriguez, MD, chief chief of empirical health, formerly of Kaiser and UC San Francisco, and offers risk guidelines and models of the US Preventive Services Task Force, American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology, and American Board of Family Medicine.
In its heart, empirical health data is designed to complete the physical form and health monitoring of your intelligent watch with clinical data, filling whites that even the best smart watches cannot be completely covered.
Smartwatch’s ultimate health control?
The health score of the empirical health radar classifies biomarkers in six categories: heart health, sleep, lungs, exercise, mental health and kidney / liver.
For example, empirical health notes, even the best Apple watches cannot predict heart attacks, but cholesterol and blood pressure data can be used in an American cardiology risk calculator to do so. Empirical Health Radar combines this clinical test with the ECG data of your smartwatch, irregular rhythm alerts, heart rate at rest and cardio recovery measures to give you a more holistic heart score that you will get an intelligent watch or an individually blood test.
You can download a PDF or a blood test image that you have already passed, or import recordings directly from Apple Health using the Apple Clinical Record API in Healthkit.
If you do not want to make clinical data, you can use an empirical health radar without recent blood tests and get a partial score. Or for more convenience, you can reserve a test directly via the empirical health application or finish one in a local laboratory for $ 97.
Empirical Health is available on the App Store or Google Play Store, or the Empirical Health website.