'Digital PPE' approach to form part of COVID-19 detection study

The West Virginia University Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute (RNI), WVU Medicine, and smart ring maker Oura Health have announced a study designed to accelerate early detection of the COVID-19 virus symptoms and contagiousness.

WVU Photo

Using an AI-driven predictive model, wearable ring technology, and a COVID-19 monitoring app, RNI scientists and partners are developing an innovative “digital PPE” approach that potentially can identify infected frontline healthcare professionals before they become symptomatic – a possible breakthrough in monitoring capabilities and limiting the spread. 

The RNI’s approach not only measures the onset of increased body temperature from the Oura ring and physical symptoms but goes beyond that by looking at the individual holistically – integrating physiologic measures with psychological, cognitive and behavioural biometrics, such as stress and anxiety. In real-time, this holistic approach can provide an early and more comprehensive assessment, tracking the mind-body connection and homeostasis in the context of asymptomatic infection. Through this analysis, the team can forecast and predict the onset of fever, cough, fatigue and other physical symptoms linked to viral infections.

Over the past three weeks, Oura smart rings and the RNI COVID-19 monitoring smartphone app have been deployed to physicians, nurses and other frontline healthcare workers in the ED, ICU, testing sites, and urgent care settings in West Virginia. In addition, the RNI is partnering with hospitals across the U.S., including those in New York City, Philadelphia, Nashville and other critical emerging areas, to monitor more than 1,000 front-line healthcare personnel with exposure to COVID-19.

Dr. Ali Rezai, executive chair of the WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute, said: “We are continuously monitoring the mind-body connectivity through our integrated neuroscience platform measuring the autonomic nervous system, fatigue, anxiety, circadian rhythms, and other human resilience and recovery functions. Our AI-driven models are currently predicting symptoms 24 hours prior to onset, and we are working toward a three-plus day forecast. This forecasting capability will help us get ahead of this pandemic; limit the spread to protect healthcare workers, their families, and our communities; and improve our understanding of health recovery.

“We have done extensive research in the wearable space, and Oura’s accuracy and usability is unparalleled to anything we have tested. We are proud to partner with Oura and its innovation to serve our population.”

More broadly, the RNI is continuously monitoring and analysing more than 30,000 subjects through its integrative neuroscience approach, gaining insight and predictive success in chronic pain, addiction, aging and other illnesses, as well as the readiness and recovery of our military.

Harpreet Rai, CEO of Oura Health, said: “At Oura, we’ve heard first-hand from our users how the physiological signals tracked by the ring have predicted the onset of the virus before other symptoms manifest. We’re grateful we can apply this knowledge to help vulnerable caregivers swiftly identify the earliest signs of the disease and take the appropriate protective measures to limit its spread.”  

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