Vitals app will make you wear the Apple Watch while you sleep

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in watchOS

Apple Watch users will benefit from the Vitals app in watchOS 11, Apple's VP of Health has said, but it's something that will only really be useful when you sleep.

Three smartwatches displaying health data: left showing '2 Outliers,' center displaying elevated vitals alert, right showing 'Typical' vitals. Pink, light blue, and dark blue watchbands respectively.
The Vitals app in watchOS 11



Apple has provided limited sleep tracking in the Apple Watch for a few years, as part of its overall health and wellbeing offering. However, in watchOS 11, a new addition will require users to wear the Apple Watch as they slumber to get a better reading of their health.

In an interview with CNET, Apple VP of Health Dr. Sumbul Desai explains how the Vitals app will provide a daily overview of a user's health, as collected by the Apple Watch. This information will include things like sleep data, heart rate, respiratory rate, blood oxygen level, and skin temperature at rest when the user is asleep.

If the Apple Watch detects that multiple vital data points are out of line from the norm of the user, the app will alert the user. Sleeping is needed as daytime movement and stress can affect the measurements, whereas it can measure the "basal" state when the user is at rest.

"So much of your health is invisible," Desai said. "This daily health status is almost like a little bit of a snapshot of your health overnight."

Desai says that the average Apple Watch user will need to make a behavior change and sleep while wearing the device. "To make your Apple Watch data work for you, you'll need to sleep with it," she insists.

The snapshot won't necessarily offer a user distinct values or a score but instead how a user's state compares to a baseline. "We compare you against you," Desai proposes.

Everyday changes



The whole point of Vitals is to indicate when a user has changed their lifestyle from the norm or that their body is doing something outside of the norm. For example, someone who drank alcohol could be warmer overnight, or eliminating caffeine could lower their heart rate, along with being sick in some situations.

The app uses data that was collected in the ongoing Heart and Movement Study, an Apple project with the American Heart Association and Harvard's Brigham and Women's Hospital. Data points observed in the study informed how the Vitals app reacts to changes.

"We don't say 'You need to go to a doctor,'" Desai insisted about the notifications. "We're really thoughtful about not unnecessarily queueing you to go to the doctor."

"We thought trough really carefully, when do we want to notify you, and how do we want to notify you," she added. "We want to make sure when we notify you it's for a meaningful reason and its actionable."

Users will be able to try out the Vitals app as part of watchOS 11, which will be released to the public in the fall.



Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 8
    atomic101atomic101 Posts: 134member
    Perhaps, to coincide with this, Watch 10 will provide 24 hours of expected battery life?
    boboliciouswatto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 8
    jellybellyjellybelly Posts: 136member
    My Watch Ultra I, lasts over a day unless I have a really long workout, which if using the fitness App, takes frequent measurements that can use higher than average power. 

    While I could and have worn my wartch during a shower or bath, I use the time before, during and after to charge my watch.   I used to swap between an older watch and most recent watch for charging.  

    A great sleep app that tracks the same measurements mentioned in the article is AutoSleep.  It’s uncannily good, including capturing my sleep on the couch automatically—even having information on sleep time, quality sleep time and deep sleep time.

    When on certain medications, I check respiration and heart rate if the medications affect those biometrics.  Since it’s a year older, it tracks blood oxygen as well.  That still works as I got the watch before the lawsuit had Apple putting that feature (SPO2) on hold, until the lawsuit is resolved.  
    ForumPostwatto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 8
    mike1mike1 Posts: 3,433member
    atomic101 said:
    Perhaps, to coincide with this, Watch 10 will provide 24 hours of expected battery life?
    New watches already do last at least 24 hours. Still have to pick time to charge for about an hour.

    ForumPostwatto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 8
    atomic101atomic101 Posts: 134member
    mike1 said:
    atomic101 said:
    Perhaps, to coincide with this, Watch 10 will provide 24 hours of expected battery life?
    New watches already do last at least 24 hours. Still have to pick time to charge for about an hour.

    Not officially.  Apple still states 18 hours of battery life for Series 9 and below (Ultra being the obvious exception).  My Series 5 still lasts longer than that (about 20 hrs on average), but my point is that if the "official" battery life could be raised, it would push things to a more realistic full day of wear.  As it stands now, I've always had to charge for an hour or so beyond the opportune shower top ups.

    Fully understand the compromise between battery and features.  However, a small bump to battery life would give a much-appreciated additional flex in active use.
    edited July 16 watto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 8
    atomic101 said:
    mike1 said:
    atomic101 said:
    Perhaps, to coincide with this, Watch 10 will provide 24 hours of expected battery life?
    New watches already do last at least 24 hours. Still have to pick time to charge for about an hour.

    Not officially.  Apple still states 18 hours of battery life for Series 9 and below (Ultra being the obvious exception).  My Series 5 still lasts longer than that (about 20 hrs on average), but my point is that if the "official" battery life could be raised, it would push things to a more realistic full day of wear.  As it stands now, I've always had to charge for an hour or so beyond the opportune shower top ups.

    Fully understand the compromise between battery and features.  However, a small bump to battery life would give a much-appreciated additional flex in active use.
    Fast charging on the 9 makes a big difference. Half an hour or less gives a great top up.
    dewmewatto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 8
    Great idea and lifesaving tech but what’s with the annoyingly bad battery life in 2024…? Have had a Garmin but the OS is too clunky, so will just stick with my bulletproof Aquaracer and GShock square until AW can go a few days.
  • Reply 7 of 8
    chasmchasm Posts: 3,557member
    I have a Series 7 Apple Watch, and have been using sleep-monitoring apps for years now.

    When I get home from work, I take the Watch off and put it on the charger. Two or three hours later, I put it back on. I also routinely put it on the charger when I’m taking a bath or shower (I know it can survive this, but I prefer not to wear it there).

    This means I never have a problem with wearing it through the night for sleep monitoring, and as I write this I’m 25 percent through my workday, and the Watch — having last been removed from the charger at 8pm last night — is at 81 percent power.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 8
    atomic101 said:
    Perhaps, to coincide with this, Watch 10 will provide 24 hours of expected battery life?

    chasm said:
    I have a Series 7 Apple Watch, and have been using sleep-monitoring apps for years now.

    When I get home from work, I take the Watch off and put it on the charger. Two or three hours later, I put it back on. I also routinely put it on the charger when I’m taking a bath or shower (I know it can survive this, but I prefer not to wear it there).

    This means I never have a problem with wearing it through the night for sleep monitoring, and as I write this I’m 25 percent through my workday, and the Watch — having last been removed from the charger at 8pm last night — is at 81 percent power.

    I also have a 7, and I regularly get at least 24 hours from my watch, even when I go to the gym or ride my bike.  I wear it all night, take it off when my alarm goes of, and it's usually still at least 25-40% charged at that point.  It stays on the charger while I put my coffee on and take my morning ablutions, usually no more than about an hour.

    Occasionally, when I'm being lazy on a weekend, I won't do the usual morning routine and just leave it on.  It will still last until 6 or 7 pm that day.  Of course, it also takes 2-3 hours to charge when I do that, so I try not to do it often.
    tht
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