Health on Apple Watch

Apple Watch.

Empowering your patients to live a healthier day.

Apple Watch has powerful apps that make it the ultimate device for a healthy life. And it can support you and your patients across multiple aspects of health, including heart health, mobility, activity, medication and more.

Heart rate notifications.

Apple Watch checks for unusually high or low heart rates in the background, which could be signs of a serious underlying condition. This could help you and your patients identify situations that may warrant further evaluation.

If a patient’s heart rate is above 120 bpm or below 40 bpm while they appear to have been inactive for 10 minutes, the user will receive a notification. Patients can adjust the threshold bpm or turn these notifications on or off. All heart rate notifications — along with date, time and heart rate — can be viewed in the Health app on iPhone.

Irregular rhythm notifications.

The irregular rhythm notification occasionally checks for signs of irregular rhythms that may be suggestive of atrial fibrillation (AFib). This feature won’t detect all instances of AFib but may catch something that can provide your patients with an early indication that further evaluation may be warranted.

Irregular rhythm notifications use the optical heart sensor to detect the pulse wave at the wrist and look for variability in beat‑to‑beat intervals when the user is at rest. If the algorithm repeatedly detects an irregular rhythm suggestive of AFib, your patient will receive a notification and the date, time and beat‑to‑beat heart rate will be recorded in the Health app.

ECG app.

With the ECG app, patients who experience symptoms such as rapid or skipped heartbeat, or receive the irregular rhythm notification, can capture an ECG and record their symptoms. This real-world data can enable you to make more informed and timely decisions regarding further evaluation and care.

The ECG app uses the electrical heart sensor built into the Digital Crown and the back crystal to record a single-lead ECG similar to a Lead I ECG. The ECG app then provides a result of sinus rhythm, atrial fibrillation, atrial fibrillation with high heart rate, inconclusive or poor recording, and prompts the user to enter any symptoms such as rapid or pounding heartbeat, dizziness or fatigue. An inconclusive result may occur if there is presence of arrhythmia other than AFib, presence of an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) or pacemaker, or poor electrical signal, which can result from right axis deviation. The recorded waveform, results, date, time and any symptoms are recorded and can be exported from the Health app as a PDF to share with a clinician. If the patient notes symptoms that indicate a serious condition, they are prompted to immediately call emergency services.

In a clinical study using a 12-lead ECG as a reference device, the ECG app demonstrated 99.3 per cent specificity in classifying sinus rhythm and 98.5 per cent sensitivity in classifying AFib for the classifiable results.

Learn more about the ECG app

AFib History.

AFib History is a first-of-its-kind feature that provides patients who are diagnosed with atrial fibrillation with lifestyle insights and long-term tracking of how frequently they show signs of AFib. Your patients will receive notifications with an estimate of the time they spent in AFib each week while wearing their Apple Watch. Patients can also view a detailed history in the Health app.

Your patients can also track lifestyle factors that may contribute to their condition, including weight, exercise, sleep, alcohol consumption and mindful minutes. These factors are charted alongside their AFib burden to help them better understand the relationship between their lifestyle and AFib.

AFib History is FDA cleared for users 22 years and older with a diagnosis of atrial fibrillation. Once AFib History is turned on, irregular rhythm notifications will be automatically turned off.

Validation of AFib detection and monitoring features.

Each feature on Apple Watch is subject to rigorous scientific validation to help your patients receive trustworthy and reliable insights. In 2017 and 2018, researchers at Stanford University School of Medicine worked with Apple on the Apple Heart Study and over 400,000 Apple Watch users to validate the ability of wearable technology to aid in the early detection of atrial fibrillation, and to support the introduction of the irregular rhythm notification feature. Since then, Apple has conducted several prospective multicentre clinical trials to support additional products, including the ECG app, enhancements to the irregular rhythm notification feature, and most recently, the AFib History feature.

See the results of the Apple Heart Study

Learn more about arrhythmia detection validation (PDF)

Compare Apple Watch models.

  • Heart Rate and Irregular Rhythm Notifications
  • AFib History
  • ECG App
  • Low Cardio Fitness Notifications
  • Blood Oxygen Level
  • Fall Detection
  • Sensors
  • Optical heart sensor
  • Optical heart sensor
  • Electrical heart sensor
  • Optical heart sensor and GPS
  • Optical heart sensor
  • Accelerometer and gyroscope
  • Apple Watch Series 3
  • Heart Rate and Irregular Rhythm Notifications Optical heart sensor
  • AFib History Optical heart sensor
  • ECG App Electrical heart sensor
  • Low Cardio Fitness Notifications Optical heart sensor and GPS
  • Blood Oxygen Level Optical heart sensor
  • Fall Detection Accelerometer and gyroscope
  • Apple Watch SE
  • Heart Rate and Irregular Rhythm Notifications Optical heart sensor
  • AFib History Optical heart sensor
  • ECG App Electrical heart sensor
  • Low Cardio Fitness Notifications Optical heart sensor and GPS
  • Blood Oxygen Level Optical heart sensor
  • Fall Detection Accelerometer and gyroscope
  • Apple Watch Series 4 and 5
  • Heart Rate and Irregular Rhythm Notifications Optical heart sensor
  • AFib History Optical heart sensor
  • ECG App Electrical heart sensor
  • Low Cardio Fitness Notifications Optical heart sensor and GPS
  • Blood Oxygen Level Optical heart sensor
  • Fall Detection Accelerometer and gyroscope
  • Apple Watch Series 6 or later
  • Heart Rate and Irregular Rhythm Notifications Optical heart sensor
  • AFib History Optical heart sensor
  • ECG App Electrical heart sensor
  • Low Cardio Fitness Notifications Optical heart sensor and GPS
  • Blood Oxygen Level Optical heart sensor
  • Fall Detection Accelerometer and gyroscope
  • Apple Watch Ultra
  • Heart Rate and Irregular Rhythm Notifications Optical heart sensor
  • AFib History Optical heart sensor
  • ECG App Electrical heart sensor
  • Low Cardio Fitness Notifications Optical heart sensor and GPS
  • Blood Oxygen Level Optical heart sensor
  • Fall Detection Accelerometer and gyroscope

Mobility and Cardio Fitness.

Mobility and cardiovascular fitness can be strong indicators of overall physical health and a predictor of long-term well-being. Apple Watch and iPhone can provide estimates of mobility metrics to give you and your patients a better understanding of how they impact mobility today, and provide tools to monitor these factors over time. Mobility metrics include Cardio Fitness (VO2 max), Six-Minute Walk Distance and other metrics used to measure walking quality (Walking Speed, Step Length, Double Support Time and Walking Asymmetry). These metrics can be utilised for research and app development with the user’s permission.

Learn more about how these metrics were developed and validated:

Using Apple Watch to Estimate Cardio Fitness with VO2 max (PDF)

Using Apple Watch to Estimate Six-Minute Walk Distance (PDF)

Measuring Walking Quality Through iPhone Mobility Metrics (PDF)

Fall Detection.

When a hard fall is detected with Apple Watch Series 4 or later, an alert appears and allows the user to easily call emergency services or dismiss the alert. If the user is unresponsive for about a minute, an emergency call will be placed automatically and a message will be sent to the user’s emergency contacts. All falls detected are recorded in the Health app. This feature is automatically enabled for users 55 years and older and can be turned on for anyone in the Apple Watch app on iPhone.

Medical ID.

Medical ID allows first responders and emergency-room clinicians to access critical medical information from a patient’s iPhone Lock Screen or Apple Watch without requiring a passcode, and without compromising patient privacy. Patients can list important information such as allergies, medication, conditions, organ-donor preferences and emergency contacts by setting up Medical ID in the Health app on iPhone.

Medications.

The Medications experience on iPhone, iPad and Apple Watch helps your patients track and manage the medication they take. Your patients can receive reminders to log scheduled medication, see medication adherence over time and review their active medication list.

Cycle Tracking.

Cycle Tracking on iPhone, iPad and Apple Watch lets your patients track their menstrual cycle, log symptoms and receive notifications for upcoming periods and fertile windows. They can also receive notifications when their logged cycle shows signs of a possible cycle deviation, such as irregular or infrequent periods, which can be associated with an underlying medical condition.

Designed with security and privacy in mind.

When a user’s iPhone or iPad is locked with a passcode, Touch ID or Face ID, their health data in the Health app is encrypted on the device. If a user chooses to sync their health data with iCloud, it is encrypted while in transit and at rest.

The future of healthcare is in your hands.

Learn more about Apple in Healthcare

And the future of health is on your wrist.

Learn more about Apple Watch