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Medical Devices & Equipment

Wearable Medical Devices

Wearable medical devices are body-worn electronics that continuously sense and transmit health data such as heart rhythm, glucose, or activity. Unlike consumer fitness trackers, clinical-grade wearables meet regulatory standards and increasingly support remote monitoring of post-surgical and chronic-care patients.

What are wearable medical devices?

Wearable medical devices are body-worn electronics that sense, record, and often transmit physiological data such as heart rhythm, blood glucose, oxygen saturation, or movement. They are designed to be worn continuously or for extended periods so that data is captured during ordinary daily life rather than only during a clinic visit.

What separates clinical-grade wearables from consumer fitness gadgets is regulatory clearance and validated measurement accuracy. These devices are intended to produce data that clinicians can act on, and many integrate directly into remote monitoring workflows.

Why do they matter for patient care?

Wearable medical devices extend observation beyond the walls of a facility, which is valuable for chronic-disease management and for watching patients during recovery. Continuous data can surface deterioration or complications earlier than periodic in-person checks.

For surgical patients sent home the same day, post-operative wearables can track vitals and activity during the critical early recovery window. This supports earlier detection of problems and can reduce avoidable readmissions or emergency visits after an outpatient procedure.

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