It seems that wearing the Apple Watch on your wrist is becoming more than just having a smartwatch on your wrist and that is There are already several documented cases in which this little device has saved a person's life.
In some cases we can say that the help of the Apple Watch came in the form of "being able to make a call in the event of an accident" in others due to the constant monitoring carried out by the heart rate sensor (the most recent in an 18-year-old girl) and now that of William Monzidelis, who after getting dizzy went into the bathroom and the Apple Watch immediately alerted him to seek urgent medical assistance.
On the other hand, this is the recent case of a young woman with kidney failure on May 1, in which her Apple Watch "sang" to her. 190 beats per minute:
Stories like Deanna's inspire us to dream bigger and push harder every day. https://t.co/O7xJ9n1MHg
- Tim Cook (@tim_cook) May 1th 2018
Monzidelis lost about 80 percent of its blood
It seems like the problem in this case was an ulcer and after entering the bathroom of the establishment completely dizzy, he began to bleed abruptly and his Apple Watch alerted him almost immediately to seek urgent medical assistance.
The news published in the middle NBC New York He says that Monzidelis was transferred in his mother's car and it was really full of blood after half an hour's journey to the hospital. Once the hospital confirmed that the patient had an ulcer and had lost a lot of blood, specifically 80%. Once stabilized and after several transfusions, the patient could be operated on and the doctors explain that the clock was key to determining his new ailment. It goes without saying that in the event of any sudden loss of blood and for no apparent reason, his thing is to move to a hospital as quickly as possible.
Doctors told Monzidelis that if he had not received the notification of his Apple Watch "he would not have survived his medical emergency" but evidently many factors come into play in this statement. In any case, this and that of the young Deanna, have been the most recent cases in which the Apple Watch became more important than simply receiving notifications, calls or counting calories burned ...