Sleep
and Pain at the Consumer Electronics Show
Health Economist, Advisor
& Trend Weaver; Blogger, THINK-Health and Health Populi blog
January 12, 2016
Half of our health status is bolstered through lifestyle and daily choices; only 20 percent of our
individual health destinies are attributable to genetics, 20 percent to our
environment, and 10 percent based on access to health care services. The 2016
Consumer Electronics Show (CES) was held in Las Vegas last week, and featured
an expanding array of health-focused, connected "things" for health
in the growing Internet of Things landscape. Beyond the usual wearable
technologies for the wrist that measure steps, heart function, and calorie
burn, a growing number of devices address what Alexandra Drane coined as "The Unmentionables" -- social determinants of health that can be
taboo, not sufficiently discussed in public, but together can diminish health,
quality of life, and mental wellbeing.
Foremost among these is sleep deprivation, a topic deeply
covered in the February 2016 issue of
Consumer Reports. "Sleeplessness has a long and tortured
history," the magazine notes, explaining that the first documented sleep
deprivation was a way to punish prisoners in the 15th century. In the 21st
century, sleep deprivation is a way of life for too many people, as 68 percent
of people in the U.S. struggling to get to sleep at least once a week.
At CES, a
portfolio of smart beds, apps, sleep-tracking sensors and light bulbs target
this health risk to go beyond prescription and over-the-counter drugs which
have become risky solutions when taken too often or mixed with other substances
(say, recreational drugs like marijuana or alcohol).
In the smart bed category, I spoke with the developers of the
Variowell bed which is made of a sensor-embedded "dynamic foam" that
connects with sleep-tracking app data and adjusts firmer or softer based on a
person's sleep patterns. Their technology is based on a
hypothesis that the firmness of a bed surface determines a person's waking from a deep sleep
(known as "N3 stage"). The company expects to license the technology
to a major bed manufacturer by mid-2016.
The
popular Sleep Number bed launched a new version, the It Bed, which tracks sleep
patterns and marries to the SleepIQ app, a smart home app with an Internet of
Things play. If you sleep soundly when the room is warmer, then the bed will
communicate to your smart thermostat to turn up the heat. Another smart bed,
The Safebed from Emfit, is targeted to the safe aging-at-home market. The
Safebed tracks sleep quality, duration of sleep, respiration and heart rates.
The sensors are built into the bed so there's nothing to wear while sleeping.
The bed's app can push daily summaries and notifications to a loved one (perhaps
an adult child), say if the sleeper was absent from bed for many hours one
night.
After
sleeping, you may need a wake-up call, and several tools unveiled at CES look
to wake us up in new ways. The French company Holi launched Bonjour, a voice
controlled, "If This Then That" (IFTTT) alarm and home monitor. Why
"IFTTT?" Say it's the weekend, you're a runner, and it's torrentially
raining outside on a Saturday morning. Bonjour won't wake you up that morning
and lets you sleep in. Holi also offers Sleepmaster, which is a sleep monitor
with a wake up function as well as claiming the ability to evaluate risks of
sleep apnea.
In the
smart light bulb category, Holi launched the Smartlamp and the SleepCompanion,
with gentle wake up lighting and "mood +matching" to the sleeper's
needs. The SmartShaker 2 from iLuv is a Bluetooth connected wireless wake up
alarm that guarantees to wake up the user with vibration, ringtone, panic
sound, light or music. This device also connects in the IoT sense to a smart
bulb called the Rainbow. (Smart bulbs and lighting are also a big category in
the IoT, in and beyond health applications.)
Do you
need to listen to music or talk shows to fall asleep? You're not alone, and the
developers of Bedphones recognize you. They released Bedphones Generation 3, a
thin, on-ear headphone designed for sleeping. The product comes with a mobile
app which enables users to automatically shut off the sound when users get to
sleep.
Perhaps your stress and tension prevent you from falling asleep. Over
50 million people in the U.S. manage
chronic tension headaches and migraines, and that's what the BioTrak Health
Halo was developed to address. The Halo is a sensor-embedded headband coupled
with an app that guides a user through relaxation exercises which can be very
helpful for relaxing before bedtime.
Chronic pain is a risk factor for sleep deprivation. The 2015 Sleep in America Pollfound that pain is a key
factor in the gap between the amount of sleep Americans say they need and the
amount they're getting - an average 42 minute sleep debt for those with chronic
pain and 14 minutes for those who've suffered from acute pain in the past week.
More than 100 million people in the United States suffer from chronic pain.
"Pain is prevalent, and sleep suffers," the foundation asserts.
The Quell device from Neurometrix was featured at CES, from a
company that is mature in the medical device market for diagnosing pain
marketed to the professional community - doctors and other clinicians dealing
with patients in pain. The FDA-approved Quell device was developed to be
marketed direct-to-consumers in pain.People managing pain multi-task their approach, using
over-the-counter medications, prescription drugs (with an alarming growth of
opioids and other narcotics), meditate and do yoga, see chiropractors, get
acupuncture, among other tactics. Quell is a flexible fabric cuff embedded with
sensors that wraps around the upper calf below the knee. Quell was co-designed
with IDEO, the design experts, and reflects a streamlined form factor that
looks more like consumer electronics sold at Best Buy than a medical device
purchased at the pharmacy.
While the 2016 CES had its share of big screen TVs, connected
cars, and 3D printers, the event is growing its health/wellness and health/care
chops. "I see a world with connected devices that are constantly learning
and discovering new ways of doing everything; improving the way we live," said Gary Shapiro, CEO of The Consumer Technology Association during his keynote kicking off the
Show. Watch for more health and sleep devices in your local retail and online
sellers' shops that can help you live better and healthier. Sleep is the first
of many social determinants of health that the Internet of Things will help
address.
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