Hypertension Alert Test: My Experience & Results

by Anika Shah - Technology
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“OK, now they’ve got my attention!” I thought when Apple finally announced its long-rumored hypertension tool alongside the Watch Series 11.

I’m at risk for hypertension, also known as high blood pressure. My mother and father have been diagnosed with hypertension-and doctors have warned me that I may be next, as some of my readings have crept up into the elevated range.

As Apple said in its keynote in September, hypertension is a “silent killer.” According to the CDC, high blood pressure rarely shows any symptoms. Nearly half of Americans have hypertension.If left untreated, it can lead to heart attack, stroke, kidney failure, and vision loss. Of course, I don’t want that for me, so I tested the Apple Watch Series 11 for over a month to see how its new hypertension tool performs.

Demystifying Apple’s hypertension alerts

Frist, let’s clear up some common misconceptions about Apple’s new hypertension tool. although Apple unveiled the feature during the Watch Series 11’s debut, it’s not exclusive to the Watch Series 11.So if you have an Apple Watch Series 9 or 10, you can still use the new hypertension tool with the latest software update (Watch OS 26+).This goes for the Ultra 2 and 3, too. The SE line, and models older than Series 9, can’t access the feature.

Apple Watch Can Now Detect Potential Hypertension – But there Are Catches

Your Apple Watch might soon be able to tell you something is up with your blood pressure, but it’s not as simple as glancing at your wrist.Apple recently rolled out a new hypertension detection feature,but it comes with some significant limitations.

Understanding Your Numbers

On a blood pressure monitor,the top number is your systolic reading,and the bottom number is your diastolic reading.

How the Alerts work

Don’t expect your Apple Watch to send alerts right away. It needs a full 30-day stretch of background data, with at least 14 days of solid readings, before it can flag anything. After that first 30-day window wraps, it checks for any patterns that point to possible hypertension and send an alert only if something stands out. After that, the whole cycle resets and a new 30-day review period begins before you can get another alert.

Who Can Use It?

Interestingly, Apple explicitly restricts the hypertension tool to users who have not been previously diagnosed with high blood pressure. This FDA-cleared feature is only meant to flag possible undiagnosed hypertension-not to monitor and manage an existing condition.

Other factors that will disqualify you from using the feature? You must be over 22 years old and you cannot be pregnant.

How do hypertension alerts work?

## Apple Watch Can Now Alert You to High blood Pressure: Here’s What You Need to Know

Apple has added a new hypertension detection tool to its Health app, available to Apple Watch users. This feature passively monitors your blood pressure data and can notify you if it consistently detects high readings. Here’s a breakdown of how it effectively works, how accurate it is indeed, and what it means for your health.

### How to Turn On the High blood Pressure Tool

In the Health app, navigate to Search > Heart > Hypertension Notifications to turn on the high blood pressure tool.

### How accurate are the hypertension alerts?

Apple made it clear that the new hypertension tool won’t catch everyone with high blood pressure. According to a clinical study the Cupertino company conducted, the feature caught about 4 in 10 people who have hypertension. Among those with stage 2 hypertension, which is more severe, the feature alerted more than half.

So this means that if you *do* get a notification, that’s your cue to loop in your doctor. But if you *don’t* get one, don’t assume you’re in the clear. The traditional blood-pressure cuff and medical expertise are still the gold standard.

This leads me to my own experience with the Apple Watch Series 11’s hypertension alerts-or lack thereof.

### Did I receive any hypertension alerts?

I’m uniquely positioned to test Apple’s new hypertension tool. I’ve gotten the “be careful” talk with my doctor regarding hypertension…## Apple Watch’s New Hypertension Notifications: What They Really mean

Kimberly Gedeon

When I logged my blood pressure reading, a message popped up and said, “This measurement is significantly out of range.”

My diastolic number was high. As Dawn Warner Kershner, D.O., a cardiologist with The heart Center at Mercy in Baltimore, MD, told Prevention, the ideal number is 80 mmHg or less.Mine climbed above 90.

Before you jump to “So you did have hypertension and the Watch didn’t catch it?,” please remember that I only logged a couple of cuff readings-far from the multiple, averaged measurements the American Heart Association recommends for diagnosing anything.

Again, Apple’s new hypertension tool doesn’t measure blood pressure; it’s simply scanning for peculiar patterns. You can’t compare the two. What the hypertension tool can do, though, is raise a hand when something looks off. Consider it an early nudge-not a medical call. And as Apple shares in its own clinical study, some nudges will slip through the cracks.

health app notification about possible hypertensionKimberly Gedeon

The Sleep app on apple Watch Series 11 explains that my sleep duration has increased over the last seven days.

In my experience, it’s accurate.On days when I’m up all night working, it wags its proverbial finger at me with a low score; I’ve gotten numbers as low as 50. However,on weekends,when I have more time to sleep in,my score improves. My best score was in the 80 to 90 range.

But I’m not exactly wowed. As someone who already owns a Samsung Galaxy watch 6, I find the data presented by both watches to be fairly similar.

Apple Watch series 11 Battery Life: A Real-World Test

the Apple Watch Series 11 boasts an notable 18-hour runtime. but how does that translate to everyday use? I put the new smartwatch to the test to see how long the battery truly lasts.

I tracked the Apple Watch Series 11’s battery life with my typical daily use: an hour of fitness tracking, a steady stream of notifications, light Walkie Talkie use, and general all-day wear. I wore it to track my sleep at night, too. It was charged up to 100% on a Sunday at 2:30 p.m.It died at 12:48 a.m. on the following Tuesday. That’s one full day, 10 hours and 18 minutes.

Though, on heavier use days, like when I’m using the Apple Watch to talk to my fiancé, the battery life drops down to about one day. The new Apple Watch Series 11, by the way, now supports 5G (if you get the cellular model).

Key Takeaways

  • With typical use, the Apple Watch Series 11 can easily last a day and 10 hours.
  • Heavy usage, particularly features like cellular calls, will reduce battery life to around one day.
  • Sleep tracking doesn’t significantly impact overall battery performance.

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