https://mRhythmStudy.org
If you have an Apple Watch, you can contribute data, regardless of whether you have a heart condition.In general, we'd like to add more comparisons in the app so that you know how your stats fit in to the larger population. Stay tuned. :)
Average heartrate gradually going up over the last few weeks? Your doctor's office will ping you to drop by. Sleep patterns have been erratic lately? Send down an electronic questionnaire to see what's up. You see? If you unveil the symptoms sooner, you can treat them sooner. That makes sense. $$$.
Disclosing everything to a trusted employer or health provider is a step we need to be very careful about. It's panopticon territory.
I'm watching my heart rate like crazy since I was diagnosed with hypothyroidism last Friday and my metamorphosis back to being human again since I started taking synthroid it's interesting to see but especially my heart rate.
My resting heart rate which was around 70 bpm (yeah I'm a slug) but now it's about 85 bpm.
The Microsoft Health website to view Band2 data is OK but not really detailed e.g. my heart rate last night https://i.imgur.com/E4Y8IzZ.png
I only wish I had the Band2 or any fitness tracker sooner to get more of a baseline or better yet before my thyroid decided to go on it's five year death spiral and take me with it.
https://h4labs.wordpress.com/2015/07/28/in-the-future-everyo...
We could use a few more sensors like blood pressure and skin temperature.
What's really needed is for Android Watches to aggressively compete with Apple. Apple and Samsung, for example, would really push each other.
No I don't work for Microsoft.
Blood pressure would be tricky then again the watch is around your wrist so maybe not.
A real-time blood sugar reading would be nice to see too.
Look out for fun lie-detector apps coming to your app-store-of-choice.