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Sorry, your smartwatch isn’t as accurate as you think

Sensors in today’s smartwatches can detect your heartbeat, track how you sleep and even monitor blood oxygen levels. If Apple gets its way, your watch will be able to track your blood sugar (and possibly send reports about it to your doctor).

If you’ve ever wondered, “Just how accurate are these smartwatch readings?” You’re far from alone, so I took a look. Smartwatches and fitness watches have some serious flaws you should know about.

Paging Dr. Watch

It turns out cramming a bunch of sensors into a tiny watch doesn’t create the most legit results — who knew? If you’re seeing spikes or drops in readings for sleep states or blood oxygen levels, don’t panic — it’s happening to everyone.

OK, so smartwatches are only helpful for very guessy guestimates. But what can we do to make them better?

Take your health in stride

Here are a few figurative steps I think all smartwatch users should take while getting in their literal steps (plus a free play on words!).

My smartwatch picks

If you don’t have a smartwatch yet, here are a few good ones:

🤣 Having a smartwatch is great. On the one hand, you have something you can use to answer texts and stuff; on the other hand, you don’t. (Was that a groan I heard?)

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