Health Care Workers Wore Apple Watches for Researchers Despite Warnings that the Watches Could Cause Interference with Medical Implants

By B.N. Frank

Earlier this year, Apple issued warnings about the potential for all of their products – including watches – to cause dangerous and potentially deadly interference issues with medical implants (cardio defibrillators, pacemakers, etc.)

Of course the American Heart Association (AHA) and Food and Drug Administration have issued similar warnings about smartphones and or smartwatches as well (see 1, 2, 3).  Nevertheless, researchers asked healthcare workers to wear Apple watches to monitor their stress levels.

It would be interesting to know if any of these healthcare workers treated patients with medical implants during this study.  But I digress.

From MedicalXpress:


Researchers use wearable devices to identify psychological effects of pandemic

by The Mount Sinai Hospital

Health care workers with high resilience or strong emotional support were protected against the effects of stress related to the COVID-19 pandemic compared to those who had low emotional support or resilience, according to a study published September 13 in the Journal of Medical Internet Research. Mount Sinai researchers also found that the number of individuals with COVID-19 in the community was a significant factor associated with stress in health care workers over time.

The Mount Sinai team found that high emotional support or high resilience—the ability to overcome difficulty and a reduced vulnerability to environmental stressors—resulted in a unique nervous system profile, demonstrating that these features impact both how health care workers perceive stress and how their bodies are physically affected by stress.

“Our study highlights the importance of emotional support and resilience in moderating the effects of stress on health care workers during the ongoing pandemic,” said the study’s corresponding author Robert P. Hirten, MD, Assistant Professor of Medicine (Gastroenterology) at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and member of the Hasso Plattner Institute for Digital Health at Mount Sinai and the Mount Sinai Clinical Intelligence Center (MSCIC). “Assessing the resilience and emotional support of health care workers may be able to help identify those at risk from ongoing stressors and may help guide health care institutions in allocating mental health resources for these at-risk employees.”

Several hundred study participants wore an Apple Watch that measured their heart rate variability and downloaded a customized app to complete weekly surveys measuring perceived stress, resilience, emotional support, quality of life, and optimism. Researchers found that health care workers with high resilience or high emotional support had different autonomic nervous system stress patterns compared with those who had medium or low emotional support or resilience. The autonomic nervous system is a primary component of the stress response and can be found by measuring heart rate variability. The participants’ physiological results aligned with their self-reported answers, the study concluded.

“The experience of this pandemic has been especially stressful for health care workers, and as a community we need to be able to support them, especially as the virus persists,” said the study’s co-author Zahi Fayad, Ph.D., Director of the BioMedical Engineering and Imaging Institute, Co-Founder of the MSCIC, and the Lucy G. Moses Professor of Medical Imaging and Bioengineering at Icahn Mount Sinai. “Our study is one of the first to document not only the toll the pandemic has taken on our health care workers, but also the importance of resilience and social support as specific paths toward efficiently and effectively directing support.”

The latest findings from the Warrior Watch Study build on previous research that used wearable devices to identify COVID-19 cases earlier than traditional diagnostic methods. Researchers monitored the participant’s physical activity and tracked subtle changes in their heart rate variability measured by an Apple Watch, which signaled the onset of COVID-19 up to seven days before the individual was diagnosed with the infection via nasal swab.


Over the years, smartwatch (aka activity tracker) owners have reported burns, rashes, shocks, and other undesirable symptoms while wearing these devices (see 1, 2).  Some complaints have led to recalls.  Of course, decades of research has already determined that exposure to sources of wireless radiation can cause a variety of symptoms and health issues (see 1, 2, 3, 4).  Children are more vulnerable to exposure.  Got pets?  It affects them too.

Additionally, manufacturers warn against carrying and/or holding cell phones and other wireless devices next to your body and smart watches are worn on the body.  Have you read the fine print warnings on all your devices?

Activist Post reports regularly about activity trackers and other unsafe technology.  For more information, visit our archives and the following websites:

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