You should think twice before giving ChatGPT health records
Smartwatches may tell the time, but they also serve another important role: they can help you learn more about your health. And they're not the only piece of technology to do that.
Health tech covers smartwatches and smart bands, but it can also include connected scales, blood pressure monitors, thermometers, and more. How does it work and what can it do for you? Find out in Pickr's health tech news, reviews, and guides.
The name is a little strange, but the Withings BeamO is clever: a gadget that can take medical readings and send them to your phone, no doctor needed.
Wearables can track an assortment of health aspects, and the latest inclusion could make life a little easier for pregnant women.
The latest Google wearable is all about the alliteration it seems, as Google’s Pixel Watch 4 boasts big Bs.
The Apple Watch won’t run on Android, but don’t let that stop the Huawei Watch Fit 4 Pro from getting something similar.
There’s no way to directly monitor blood sugar from an Apple Watch yet, but if you have the right hardware on your body, there’s a step in the right direction.
A new feature is on its way to Australian owners of an Apple Watch, as sleep tracking gets properly serious with sleep apnoea checks on your wrist.
The latest Samsung wearables are a little different, as the Galaxy Watch maker refines what it offered in the Ultra for more wearers.
Apple Watch and Samsung Galaxy Watch models could be checking for signs of sleep apnoea shortly, as both companies receive approval to add the feature locally.
A slightly more elegant wearable, the ScanWatch Nova Brilliant is the same great ScanWatch 2 in a different style.