Could a Fitbit-style gadget replace The Pill? Makers of ‘Ava’ say yes
Could a Fitbit-style gadget REALLY replace The Pill? Makers of £249 ‘Ava’ fertility tracking bracelets say a new setting will warn women against sex when they’re most likely to conceive
- Fertility tracker bracelet Ava can warn women when they are most fertile
- Thousands of women in the UK are already using the £249 device
- Ava can ‘detect an average of 5.3 fertile days a cycle with 89 per cent accuracy’
A fertility tracker bracelet designed to help women get pregnant could soon perform the reverse role and replace traditional contraception such as the Pill, its makers claim.
The Ava bracelet, which is already being used by thousands of women in Britain, is close to launching a contraception setting which will show when fertility is high and warn against intercourse.
Ava is in the late stages of research before rolling out the new setting on the £249 bracelet, which looks like a Fitbit-style fitness tracker.
The move is likely to be welcomed by women who often forget to take their pill. It is claimed the bracelet and its app help users keep an accurate track of their menstrual cycle by monitoring nine ‘biomarkers’, including skin temperature, breathing, heart rate and ‘perfusion’ – blood supply around the body. The makers say the bracelet can detect an average of 5.3 fertile days per cycle with 89 per cent accuracy.
Women track their fertility through an app, and can pinpoint the exact days they are most likely to get pregnant using Ava
The Swiss-based company decided to launch the contraceptive feature following feedback from women who admitted they were already using the device to avoid pregnancy. Ava global brand director Sonja Lutz said: ‘We are not a contraceptive as of today but we have clinical trials and studies running at the moment.’
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Ava is planning to seek approval from the US Food and Drug Administration which would mean it could market itself as an alternative to traditional contraception.
The company says that soon – they won’t say exactly then – it will roll out a new contraception feature
‘That is the next step,’ said Mrs Lutz, speaking at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. The company will not say when the new feature will roll out or be made available in Britain. The plan is that the bracelet will help a woman know when – and when not – to be intimate with her partner.
The bracelet is currently worn at night by those trying to conceive. Through a mobile phone app connected to the device, the wearer is shown her fertility window each month and sent an alert when it is time to start trying for a baby.
It is claimed users are able to plan intercourse months in advance, with the app mapping out when they will be most fertile.
Mrs Lutz said: ‘We have a lot of military wives, for example, or husbands who travel a lot. They need to know when to be home.’
She added that many women use the tracker because they are sick of having to ‘pee on a stick’ to carry out an ovulation test and find out if they are fertile. Ava claims 50 women around the world get pregnant each day using the bracelet.
The firm’s contraception plans come after an advert for an app which claimed to act as ‘digital birth control’ was banned in Britain last year. Natural Cycles, founded in Sweden, claimed to help prevent pregnancies through algorithms based on ovulation, menstrual cycle length and temperature.
But the Advertising Standards Authority ruled that claims made about the effectiveness of the £5.99-a-month app were exaggerated.
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