Weight watcher: A foam patch, like the one in this illustration, will monitor caloric intake and expenditure and send the data via Bluetooth to the user's cell phone.
Philometron, Inc. 2008

Biomedicine

When Your Diet Needs a Band-Aid

A new "smart patch" determines caloric intake and expenditure.

  • Friday, May 1, 2009
  • By Lauren Gravitz

It could be a dieter's best friend or worst nightmare: technology that knows how much a person has just eaten, knows how many calories he has burned off, offers suggestions for improving resolve and success, and never lets him cheat. And it's all done by a small, stick-on monitor no bigger than a large Band-Aid.

The calorie monitor, which is being developed by biotech incubator PhiloMetron, uses a combination of sensors, electrodes, and accelerometers that--together with a unique algorithm--measure the number of calories eaten, the number of calories burned, and the net gain or loss over a 24-hour period. The patch sends this data via a Bluetooth wireless connection to a dieter's cell phone, where an application tracks the totals and provides support. "You missed your goal for today, but you can make it up tomorrow by taking a 15-minute walk or having a salad for dinner," it might suggest.

Caloric-intake monitoring has long been the bugaboo of dieting systems. There are devices, such as the bodybugg, that can measure energy expenditure through a combination of accelerometers, pedometers, and temperature and sweat sensors. But the intake side is much trickier to track. Currently, the most reliable way to determine caloric intake is meticulous diary keeping or having a trained professional do the calorie counting.

"What they're working on here, I would argue, is the holy grail in health and wellness," says Don Jones, vice president of business development for health and life sciences at Qualcomm, which specializes in wireless technologies. Other than the two methods mentioned above, he notes, which aren't scalable and aren't always accurate, "there are no good methods for calculating caloric intake."

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PhiloMetron won't yet reveal exactly what makes its patch tick, but the company says that it consists of a single chip surrounded by numerous sensors, electrodes, and accelerometers, embedded in a foam adhesive patch. The system, which is designed to be replaced once a week, measures a variety of things (temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate, skin conductivity, possibly even the amount of fluid in the body), then throws the data into an algorithm to calculate the number of calories consumed, the number burned, and the net yield. Caloric-intake measurements are accurate only to about 500 calories--about two Snickers candy bars. But PhiloMetron CEO Darrel Drinan says that it is much more accurate in determining net gain or loss and is most useful for measuring trends over the course of a week or a month. In fact, the system only provides users with rolling 24-hour totals and no instantaneous data.

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  • 1020 Days Ago
  • 05/01/2009

Cool idea. I imagine it would also be useful for those training for some sort of athletic event to make sure they are eating enough calories and determine if more hydration is needed.

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weilert

1 Comment

  • 1007 Days Ago
  • 05/14/2009

Healthy Living

Diets and diet aids do not help anyone.  The only way to successfully lose weight and get the body that you want is by using the right information.  This information can be found in the book Lose Weight Using Four Easy Steps which can be ordered through the website www.bbotw.com  Everyone who has gotten a copy of this book is now healthier.

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