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How Your Smartphone Is Becoming Your Doctor

Withings has created a series of health-care devices designed to integrate seamlessly with your smartphone.
/ Source: Entrepreneur.com

Health and Fitness
Wellness through innovation
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    Think you can't survive without your mobile phone? It may not be an exaggeration.

    Ninety-five million Americans used their phones to access health care information or applications in 2013, up 27 percent year-over-year, and researchers forecast that the worldwide mobile-health apps and solutions market will explode from $6.3 billion a year ago to $20.7 billion by 2018.

    "Mobile devices are becoming more relevant to the way we relate to health care," says Cédric Hutchings, CEO of French consumer electronics startup Withings. "More and more, we're all at the center of our own health management."

    Withings is at the center of the connected-health revolution. Beginning with the 2009 launch of its Wi-Fi Body Scale, an internet-enabled bathroom scale that lets users track and visualize their weight, body mass index and fat readings via iOS and Android apps, Withings has created a series of cutting-edge health-care devices ranging from blood pressure monitors to baby monitors, each built to integrate seamlessly with more than 100 partner apps and products that leverage the company's open API.

    "A scale can benefit from connectivity because it's a device that every one of us has at home, but it's very underused," Hutchings explains. "As soon as the data is generated, it disappears. It doesn't help you manage and take charge of your health. By connecting devices to the internet, you can bring a lot of things, like processing power, storage capacity, access to real-time information and a great [user interface]."

    Withings Smart Body Analyzer Image courtesy of Withings

    Hutchings and Eric Carreel, Withings' chairman, started the company in 2008 after previously teaming at Inventel, a French electronics and communications systems manufacturer that sells residential gateways to telecom providers. The Withings team spent roughly a year developing the Wi-Fi Body Scale, tailoring the product to operate in conjunction with the then-new iPhone. Withings' sleek, sophisticated aesthetic mirrors Apple's approach to product design, and its minimalist elegance has earned laurels including the iF Gold Product Design Award and the Éoiles de l'Observeur.

    Cédric Hutchings of Withings. Photo (C) Philippe Servent

    "Nobody wants a piece of the hospital at home," Hutchings asserts. "They want cool and sexy devices."

    In mid-2013 Withings raised $30 million in venture funding from Bpifrance, Idinvest Partners, 360 Capital Partners and Ventech. Up next: Aura, a bedside sleep system that records a user's body movements, breathing cycles and heart rate, and environmental factors like noise pollution, room temperature and light levels, generating light and sound programs that are customized to the user's personal body clock. "Users have told us [Withings products] have changed their daily habits and how they manage their lives," Hutchings says. "Now doctors are starting to integrate our devices into their services. That convergence is our future."

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