With regards to reproductive well being tech, wearable makers are inclined to give attention to certainly one of two issues: interval monitoring and fertility home windows. However at CES 2025, well being startup identifyHer needs to shake up that narrative with Peri, a wearable designed to assist folks observe and handle perimenopause signs.
Perimenopause refers back to the transitional interval earlier than menopause when the ovaries progressively cease working. Hormones like estrogen and progesterone start to lower, which, in flip, can result in temper adjustments, irregular durations, scorching flashes, and night time sweats. Perimenopause signs can differ broadly from individual to individual and final 4 to eight years on common — although it may be as brief as just a few months or so long as a decade.
Peri’s press launch notes that the gadget will present “goal knowledge on perimenopausal signs, life-style, and sleep, in addition to actionable insights and encouragement to higher perceive the adjustments their our bodies are present process.” In official footage, the gadget itself seems to be pill-shaped and adheres to an individual’s torso versus their wrist or finger, like most different well being trackers.
“We are going to maintain the precise sensors confidential till we open pre-orders,” says Peri cofounder Heidi Davis, although Davis acknowledges that not one of the sensors within the gadget are new or proprietary. “Our breakthrough lies within the digital fingerprints we have recognized by three years of R&D, amassing sensor knowledge from girls experiencing perimenopause.”
Davis says these “fingerprints” have been then used to develop algorithms that present steady knowledge on scorching flashes, night time sweats, and anxiousness in perimenopausal girls. One shocking discovering, Davis says, is that physique temperature isn’t a dependable indicator of scorching flashes. Additional effort was additionally put in to make sure the algorithms weren’t swayed by issues like train or heat climate, which might have an effect on coronary heart price, sweating, or physique temperature.
Davis says identifyHer additionally deliberately determined to forgo a limb-based tracker.
“Throughout the early levels of improvement, we examined our sensors on the limbs however discovered that we couldn’t establish the digital fingerprints for a few of the typical signs of perimenopause,” Davis explains, noting that the torso delivers essentially the most correct readings and is the place scorching flashes and night time sweats are strongest.
As promising as this all sounds, none of Peri’s tech is confirmed simply but. We’ll should see how Peri fares when it launches, which is anticipated to be in mid-2025. That mentioned, its mission to convey additional readability to girls’s reproductive well being — a traditionally understudied space — is one wearable makers and researchers alike have broadly pursued in recent times. Oura, as an example, has carried out its personal examine on pregnancy prediction, whereas Apple additionally launched its personal long-term, large-scale Women’s Health Study utilizing the Apple Watch. It’s simply lastly good to see some traction on a less-studied stage of reproductive well being.