For years now, smartwatches from various brands have allowed you to track your health and wellness. They let you count your steps, check your heart rate and set reminders to stand up now and then or, if you somehow forget, they’ll give you a gentle nudge to breathe.
But recently, the likes of Apple, Withings and Fitbit have begun to move from wellness to more detailed health analysis. You can perform an ECG, monitor for irregular heart rhythms and, most recently, measure your temperature to track ovulation.
These advances take health tracking into a new, grey area. As well as providing basic measures of fitness and performance, they’re now starting to gather the kind of data that could be used to predict illnesses or health issues.
In fact, companies including…
