PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Your smartwatch might know you’re sick before you do — and it might help stop pandemics

Texas A&M research shows wearable health tech can detect infections like COVID-19 and flu within hours — enabling faster isolation, treatment and prevention

2025-06-23
(Press-News.org) Smartwatch features that measure heart rates, oxygen levels, fitness levels and sleep quality have been marketed as valuable tools for people who are eager to monitor their health.

But what if these features could do more than detect potential health issues — what if they could prevent potential health disasters such as pandemics?

Recent studies have demonstrated that smartwatches’ health apps and sensors provide enough information to accurately predict when a person has become infected with a disease like COVID-19 or the flu, even within as few as 12 hours after infection. 

In a study published this March in PNAS Nexus, researchers at Texas A&M University and Stanford University used a computational model to estimate how smartwatch-based detection could help control the spread of pandemics such as COVID-19 and pandemic influenza. 

Their findings suggest that smartwatch detection could lower pandemic transmission risk by nearly 50% by providing early warnings to people with potential infections, prompting them to isolate and greatly lowering their chances of spreading disease.  

“Even before a person starts showing symptoms of disease, there are physiological changes that happen to their body — like an increase in temperature or a change in sleeping pattern — that are usually too subtle for a person to notice but that can be detected by a smartwatch,” said Dr. Martial Ndeffo-Mbah, an assistant professor in the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences’ (VMBS) Department of Veterinary Integrative Biosciences. 

As a result, if used at scale, smartwatches could effectively end pandemics before they begin by warning people to take precautions — including getting an official diagnosis through traditional testing — much earlier in the infection cycle than they would normally.

“Research on influenza from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicates that most people initiate treatment quite late, many days after the onset of symptoms, when they should ideally begin treatment before symptoms begin,” Ndeffo said. “Even in the presymptomatic stage, infected individuals are often contagious; studies have shown that as much as 44% of COVID-19 infections were transmitted by presymptomatic individuals.”

Using smartwatches, then, could make the problem of disease transmission more personal and encourage more people to take practices like isolating and getting tested more seriously, increasing the overall efficacy of existing tools.

“The protocols for COVID-19 included steps like isolating even after being in contact with someone who is sick, but many people tend to ignore that advice if they don’t feel sick themselves,” Ndeffo said. “With a smartwatch, you could find out in real time — with a high degree of accuracy — if you are starting to get ill, which would hopefully give you a stronger motivation to follow protocols.

“Additionally, while we focused our recent publication on two respiratory diseases, there is a lot of potential to use smartwatches as a preventative tool for many other illnesses, including RSV,” he said. “Whenever the immune system responds to infection, there will be physiological changes that a smartwatch could help detect.”

Transforming Disease Diagnosis Testing remains one of the most important tools for stopping the spread of disease because people are more likely to take precautions once they have a diagnosis. But even with high-quality tests easily available to most people, there is room for improvement.

“During the COVID-19 pandemic, at-home testing kits became very popular, which is a good thing because they’re a great public health tool,” Ndeffo said. “But there is a problem with how they are used — people might only use a test if they feel sick or are about to travel, and they probably only test themselves once. That’s not frequent enough to catch every infection, especially if you want to catch them early.” 

Early detection with smartwatches could be the key to catching more infections, and it can also prompt people to seek early treatment.

“If you can seek treatment early, you may be able to prevent the worst symptoms from occurring, which is particularly important for high-risk and immunocompromised individuals,” Ndeffo said.

Creating A Personal Stake In Prevention One of the challenges of developing new public health tools is motivating large numbers of people to comply with disease-prevention protocols.

“If you wake up in the morning and feel a little tired, you’re probably not going to assume that you need to get tested for COVID-19 or the flu, especially when some of the tests involve nose swabbing and other hassles,” Ndeffo said. “So, we are considering how smartwatches may give people more information that will help them see the benefits of reducing contact and getting tested. We hope it will reach people who are not reached by traditional testing alone.”

While research teams are already making headway toward being able to use smartwatches on a large scale for disease prevention, there is still work to be done.

“Teams are working on the science and epidemiology side, and developers are working on the technology,” Ndeffo said. “Because there is so much potential good that this technology can do, we are working hard to make sure we get it right.”

By Courtney Price, Texas A&M University College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

ImmunoPET tracer enhances early detection of liver cancer

2025-06-23
NEW ORLEANS—A novel molecular imaging agent targeting glypican-3 (GPC3) has demonstrated high sensitivity and specificity in detecting hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), including tumors smaller than one centimeter, according to results from a pilot clinical study. The agent, 68Ga-aGPC3-scFv, coded as XH06, was shown to be safe, well-tolerated, and effective at providing high-contrast images of GPC3-positive liver tumors, offering a promising new tool for early diagnosis and staging of HCC—one of the most lethal forms of liver cancer. ...

AI-based brain-mapping software receives FDA market authorization

2025-06-23
A new AI-based technology that rapidly maps the brain to locate sensitive areas that control speech, vision, movement and other critical functions has received authorization from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), enabling it to be marketed to hospitals with the aim of enhancing the precision of neurosurgeries. The technology was developed by researchers and clinicians at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis to more precisely guide neurosurgeons in performing delicate brain surgeries to remove tumors or treat epilepsy, for example. The Cirrus Resting ...

New PET tracer identifies diverse invasive mold infections behind life-threatening illnesses in cancer and transplant patients

2025-06-23
NEW ORLEANS (June 23, 2025)—A novel PET radiotracer can accurately detect a wide range of mold species that are linked to dangerous infections, according to new research presented at the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 2025 Annual Meeting. The imaging agent has the potential to dramatically enhance the diagnosis and monitoring of invasive mold infections in patients. Advances in cancer and immunosuppressive treatments have helped many patients live longer, but they also leave more people with weakened immune systems, making invasive mold ...

Current Pharmaceutical Analysis (CPA) achieves notable impact factor growth in latest journal citation reports

2025-06-23
In 2025-06-18, the highly anticipated 2024 Journal Citation Reports (JCR) were released, revealing significant progress for the journal Current Pharmaceutical Analysis (CPA). The journal has achieved an impact factor of 1.5, marking a remarkable doubling from the previous year. This accomplishment underscores CPA's growing academic influence and recognition within the field of pharmacology and pharmacy. The impact factor, a core metric for evaluating a journal's academic impact, reflects the average ...

AI chatbot safeguards fail to prevent spread of health disinformation

2025-06-23
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 23 June 2025    Follow @Annalsofim on X, Facebook, Instagram, threads, and Linkedin         Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their own behalf, but also on behalf of the organization they represent.    ----------------------------       1. ...

UTIA researcher to receive award from the Soil and Water Conservation Society

2025-06-23
Sindhu Jagadamma, associate professor of soil science at the University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture, will receive the Soil and Water Conservation Society’s 2025 Conservation Research Award at the society’s annual conference in August. Soil health is critical for sustainable food production, and Jagadamma’s research in her Sustainable Soil Management Lab are developing ways to mitigate soil and environmental problems associated with conventional farm management practices. Her team studies how to maintain soil health through the implementation of conservation management, ...

HSE linguists study how bilinguals use phrases with numerals in Russian

2025-06-23
Researchers at HSE University analysed over 4,000 examples of Russian spoken by bilinguals for whom Russian is a second language, collected from seven regions of Russia. They found that most non-standard numeral constructions are influenced not only by the speakers’ native languages but also by how frequently these expressions occur in everyday speech. For example, common phrases like 'two hours' or 'five kilometres’ almost always match the standard literary form, while less familiar expressions—especially ...

Cold winters halt the northward spread of species in a warming climate

2025-06-23
As the climate warms, many species are shifting northward into areas that were previously too cold for them. A new study on the wall brown butterfly, published in the scientific journal PNAS, shows that rapid evolution can aid this process – but only up to a point. Cold winters stop further expansion beyond certain climatic limits. “Our results show that even though the butterflies adapt their life cycle as they move northwards, there are limits that evolution cannot easily overcome,” says Mats Ittonen, one of the lead authors of the study done by researchers at the Department of Zoology, Stockholm University. The wall brown (Lasiommata ...

Study finds early signs of widespread coastal marsh decline

2025-06-23
Researchers have revealed the declining health of coastal marshes several years before visible signs of decline, providing an early warning and opportunity to protect an ecosystem that serves as the first line of defense against coastal flooding.    Scientists from Colorado State University, the University of Georgia and the University of Texas at Austin developed a model to detect early signs of marsh decline using satellite observations. The model identified vulnerable marshes along Georgia’s coast by ...

Massive burps of carbon dioxide led to oxygen-less ocean environments in the deep past

2025-06-23
New research from the University of California, Davis, the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Texas A&M University reveals that massive emissions, or burps, of carbon dioxide from natural earth systems led to significant decreases in ocean oxygen concentrations some 300 million years ago.    Combining geochemical analyses of sediment cores and advanced climate modeling, the study, published June 23 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, highlights five periods when significant decreases in ocean oxygen levels (by 4% to 12%) coincided with significant increases ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Common pregnancy complications may be a signal of future stroke risk

Barcodes uncover early blueprints of our cellular origins

Stanford Medicine-led phase 3 trial shows gene therapy skin grafts help epidermolysis bullosa

‘Pill-on-a-thread’ could replace endoscopies for half of all patients being monitored for esophageal cancer risk

Study casts doubt on ‘incestuous royalty’ in Neolithic Ireland

Heart valve developed at UC Irvine shines in early-stage preclinical testing

In diseases due to exposure to toxic particles like gout, macrophages elicit separate pathways for inflammation and lysosomal function

Zoning out could be beneficial—and may actually help us learn faster

Weekly semaglutide improves blood sugar and weight in adults with Type 1 diabetes

Concerned father, statistician develops software to improve skills therapy

Your smartwatch might know you’re sick before you do — and it might help stop pandemics

ImmunoPET tracer enhances early detection of liver cancer

AI-based brain-mapping software receives FDA market authorization

New PET tracer identifies diverse invasive mold infections behind life-threatening illnesses in cancer and transplant patients

Current Pharmaceutical Analysis (CPA) achieves notable impact factor growth in latest journal citation reports

AI chatbot safeguards fail to prevent spread of health disinformation

UTIA researcher to receive award from the Soil and Water Conservation Society

HSE linguists study how bilinguals use phrases with numerals in Russian

Cold winters halt the northward spread of species in a warming climate

Study finds early signs of widespread coastal marsh decline

Massive burps of carbon dioxide led to oxygen-less ocean environments in the deep past

US muslims’ attitudes toward psychedelic therapy

HSE scientists reveal how staying at alma mater can affect early-career researchers

Durham University scientists reveal new cosmic insights as first Rubin Observatory images released

Emotional and directional enabled programmable flexible haptic interface for enhanced cognition in disabled community

Music on the brain: exploring how songs boost memory

Non-contact and nanometer-scale measurement of shallow PN junction depth buried in Si wafers

A unified approach to first principles calculations of Parton physics in hadrons

Killer whales groom each other using tools made from kelp

Killer whales make seaweed ‘tools’ to scratch each other’s backs

[Press-News.org] Your smartwatch might know you’re sick before you do — and it might help stop pandemics
Texas A&M research shows wearable health tech can detect infections like COVID-19 and flu within hours — enabling faster isolation, treatment and prevention