This wearable now offers free blood analysis to help you understand your health

- Ultrahuman has launched its Blood Vision Cloud feature
- This analyzes your health and offers insights and suggestions
- It goes up against rival products from Oura and Whoop
Want to really find out more about your health? Ultrahuman is offering a new blood test analysis feature that goes well beyond the capabilities of its best smart rings, and it could help you gain a more complete understanding of your wellbeing.
The main update is Blood Vision Cloud, a free “universal health report interpreter” that lets you upload historic medical test results to the Ultrahuman app. Once that’s done, the app uses artificial intelligence (AI) to give you “actionable insights, long-term health trends, and AI clinician summaries.” It’ll also offer personalized supplement recommendations and a blood age score, which can show you how your body is aging internally.
Right now, it works with blood tests, but Ultrahuman says it will soon encompass CT scans, MRI data, and “other diagnostic reports” in the future. It also ties in neatly with any Ultrahuman wearables you might have. For instance, it comes with UltraTrace integration that links your blood biomarkers to lifestyle data collected by the Ultrahuman Ring Air.
This update also sees Ultrahuman offer a more affordable $99 blood test. At the same time, the company’s $499 Blood Vision Annual Plan is now expanding outside the US and India and will be available in the UK, Australia, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
Blood analysis
Ultrahuman is not the only wearable company to offer blood analysis – you can currently also get similar features via Oura’s Health Panels and Whoop’s Advanced Labs. But this addition could give Ultrahuman a new way to compete with its larger rivals.
The company hasn’t said how – or if – Blood Vision Cloud will work with Ultrahuman’s other products (like the Home environmental monitor), other than saying it can use data provided by the Ring Air wearable. We’ll have to see if support for more devices arrives in the future.
But if you’ve been waiting for a way to better understand your health that ties in with your Ultrahuman Ring Air, the new Blood Vision Cloud service might be a great way to gain insights and step up your wellbeing.
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Alex Blake has been fooling around with computers since the early 1990s, and since that time he's learned a thing or two about tech. No more than two things, though. That's all his brain can hold. As well as TechRadar, Alex writes for iMore, Digital Trends and Creative Bloq, among others. He was previously commissioning editor at MacFormat magazine. That means he mostly covers the world of Apple and its latest products, but also Windows, computer peripherals, mobile apps, and much more beyond. When not writing, you can find him hiking the English countryside and gaming on his PC.
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