The device doesn’t fit in your ear canal, as seen in this person who’s wearing both an ear phone and the STAT.
STAT Health
How it works
STAT Health was co-founded by Daniel Lee, one of the original creators of the Bose Sleep Buds. He said he got the idea for the new device, aptly called the STAT, after his dad started fainting from cardiovascular issues — he wanted to help those like him find a tool that may predict a fainting spell.
But after Lee observed researchers at Johns Hopkins conducting the “tilt table test,” a specialized test for people with conditions that affect blow flow, he saw a need in a different group, mostly younger women, who may have less need for an “alert” about when they’re going to faint but are eager to get back to their day-to-day life without feeling too light-headed.
But the pandemic and the prevalence of long COVID may’ve “exploded” the pool of people who could benefit from a device like STAT, Lee said. While there are a plethora of symptoms of long COVID, some of the most common ones are shortness of breath, fatigue, brain fog and other symptoms that may be linked to a disruption in blood flow.
“We’re not technically measuring cerebral blood flow or blood flow to the brain,” Lee said. “We’re measuring blood flow to the head, which in many circumstances is reflected in the ear.” Specifically, the STAT measures blood coming through the external carotid artery, which runs blood up to the neck, face and head.
But people who chronically feel light-headed, dizzy or unwell being upright for too long may fall into a cycle of laying too much, which will further disrupt blood flow from the heart to the brain, Lee said. STAT will be able to tell you how much blood flow you’re getting, when you can take it easy and when it may be okay to move around.
Users will get scores of that blood flow, both “up” scores or “flow” scores, delivered to an app you’d open on your phone. You get a varying number of “up” points when you’re walking, standing or sitting. Your overall flow score reflects metrics like your heart rate and trends in blood pressure (not an actual mmHg reading) when you’re sitting, standing and walking.
Then, similar to other wearable devices like the Apple Watch or Oura ring, you’ll be able to tweak your activity level or lifestyle, or even share those metrics with your doctor. The STAT incorporates different sensors, including pressure and temperature sensors. It also has a micro solar panel as one charging option.
Why POTS, chronic fatigue and dizziness are so hard to treat
Dr. Jonathan Whiteson, medical director of cardiac and pulmonary rehabilitation at NYU Langone Health and fellow member of the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, said in an email that it’s hard to treat and diagnose conditions like POTS and chronic fatigue partly because there aren’t that many providers specializing in dysautonomia compared with the number of people with long COVID and others who need treatment.
“Symptoms can overlap with other conditions,” Whiteson said. “And so a detailed history is important to realize there may be an autonomic control issue.”
What’s more, specialized tests for these conditions, like the tilt table test, aren’t accessible to many, according to Whiteson. And because dysautonomia can “fluctuate,” he said, treatments and therapies need to be adjusted to how the patient feels on a day-to-day basis, in response to their heart rate and blood pressure. Some treatments include increasing water intake, “often with increased salt and electrolyte supplementation,” he said, as well as rehabilitation programs and certain medications.
Whiteson said a device that measures blood flow to the head (like the STAT) could potentially help patients, especially those with fewer symptoms or warning signs that they’re about to faint.
“If there was enough ‘warning time’ between the reduced blood flow and symptoms of low blood pressure, then people might be able to respond appropriately,” he said. “Sit down, or lie down, or do some leg muscle contractions to ‘pump’ blood from the legs toward the heart and brain.”
Read more: Oura Ring: Life With a Wearable That Knows When I’m Sick
When you can get a STAT
For people who the device is made for (i.e. people who feel light-headed or have related issues) you can sign up to get one through STAT’s website for a chance to get the device in beta testing, likely rolling out early next year. There’s no firm date on a final release data yet, Lee said, but that could happen around the second or third quarter of next year.
However, if you want one just to add to your wearable collection, you shouldn’t add your name to the list as you probably won’t get through the company’s screener questions.
“There are gonna be people who love technology and want the cool wearable, but we don’t want them,” Lee joked. “We want to help the people who need it.”