Monday, 3 April 2023

What your cough really means

Plus more health news |

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
  
What coughs can reveal about your health
By Alice Park
Senior Health Correspondent

Thanks to wearable devices, you're able to track the inner workings of your body with more precision than ever. Now, scientists are even figuring out how to analyze your coughs in real time.

Doctors think getting better information about your personal "cough IQ"—including how many times you cough per day, when you cough, and the type of cough you have—could reveal a lot about your health. Most importantly, that knowledge may help you live better and avoid disease.

Here’s what I learned after talking to some of the largest companies trying to mine cough data:

  • Smartphone apps and wearable devices can detect coughs from background noise and isolate a person's cough from other coughs with more than 90% accuracy.
  • Tracking when you cough—after meals, when you’re outside, or at night, for example—can give doctors useful hints about what’s causing your cough.
  • Cough-tracking apps can help people with allergies and chronic diseases avoid attacks, since their phones or wearables can give them a heads up when their coughing patterns change.

READ MORE

 
Share the story
What else to read
The Surprising Benefits of Sitting on the Floor Every Day
By Kelly Starrett and Juliet Starrett
Spending some time sitting on the floor every day will help 'rewild' your lower body.
Read More »
Column: America Has No Way to Take Care of Mentally Ill People
By Mona Simpson
Novelist Mona Simpson on what was lost when the U.S. shutdown its public mental health system.
Read More »
15 Million Americans Could Lose Medicaid Coverage as Pandemic-Era Policy Ends
By Solcyre Burga
During the pandemic, the yearly reapplication process for Medicaid was paused.
Read More »
Coping With IBD at the Office
By Elizabeth Millard
Tips for planning ahead so you can manage your condition better.
Read More »
Is Breakfast Really Good For You?
By Jamie Ducharme
Here's what the science says. (Originally published in 2019.)
Read More »
ONE LAST READ
The job-related benefits of knitting

A recent social-media debate centered on whether it's rude to knit during work meetings—or if it's actually conducive to doing a good job.

In a piece for the New York Times, April Rubin explains that some people don’t knit because they aren’t listening; they knit in order to better listen. The activity, which requires fine-motor movement, activates the same parts of the brain used for focus. It can be a particularly helpful coping method for people with ADHD.

Read More »

If you were forwarded this and want to sign up to receive it daily, click here.

Today's newsletter was written by Alice Park and Angela Haupt, and edited by Mandy Oaklander.

 
 
 
 
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment