Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Health & Fitness
  4. News

This FDA-approved wearable defibrillator could save children’s lives

Add as a preferred source on Google

Good news for parents of kids with heart problems. The FDA recently approved the LifeVest, a wearable defibrillator for children as young as eight years old. Intended for people who suffer from the risk of sudden cardiac arrest, it fills a gap for kids who aren’t able to have a pacemaker implanted due to other medical issues.

Made by Zoll Manufacturing Corp out of Pittsburgh, the vest itself weighs less than two pounds and is made up of an electrode belt that goes around the patient’s chest under clothing and a monitor worn on the waist. If the LifeVest detects an arrhythmia, it can deliver a life-saving shock to restore normal heart rhythm. The earliest version of the device was approved for patients eighteen years old and up in 2001, and later versions in 2002, 2006 and 2009. December 17 2015 marks the first clearance for children.

Recommended Videos

For pediatric cases, the wearer must weigh more than 41 pounds and have a chest circumference of at least 26 inches – that’s about the size of an average eight year old. There are other automated defibrillators available for kids (and of course for adults), but the LifeVest is the first to be worn by the child and provide continuous monitoring of the heart rhythm. According to the FDA, a company registry and published studies of clinical info on 248 children between three years old and 17 at risk for sudden cardiac arrest strongly influenced the approval.

Dr. Vasum Peiris. Chief Medical Officer of Pediatrics and Special Populations in the FDA‘s Center for Devices and Radiological Health mentioned that doctors do what they can to help patients, but approvals provide clear instruction on using devices and drugs.

“The pediatric medical community is often forced to use adult devices off-label without appropriate labeling or instructions for use in pediatric patients,” Dr. Peiris said in an FDA statement. “Doctors now have important information that may help them safely prescribe this life-saving device to young patients who may benefit from the device.”

You can read more about the LifeVest and how it works on the company’s website.

Aliya Barnwell
Former Contributor
Aliya Tyus-Barnwell is a writer, cyclist and gamer with an interest in technology. Also a fantasy fan, she's had fiction…
Samsung’s smart glasses leak shows why your next Galaxy wearable may live on your face
Galaxy Glasses may turn Samsung’s Watch, Ring, and phone into one face-worn ecosystem
Samsung Galaxy Glasses leak

While Samsung already has a bunch of wearables, its upcoming smart glasses might tighten the experience even further. A new leak from SammyGuru offers an early look at the Galaxy Glasses Manager app, the companion app Samsung is expected to use for its new smart glasses.

The leak does not reveal final pricing, battery life, launch date, or every hardware spec. Unlike your typical leak that just hints at a device, the companion app actually makes it sound more real.

Read more
Meta will now charge you for the best AI feature on its smart glasses, and there’s a limit even if you pay
Meta is capping free Conversation Focus use to 3 hours per month, while Meta One Premium raises that to 15.
A person wearing the Ray-Ban Meta smartglasses.

Ray-Ban Meta glasses owners are getting less free use out of one of the glasses' AI features starting this month. Conversation Focus, which isolates and amplifies the voice of the person a wearer is talking to in loud settings, has been capped at three hours of use per month for anyone who doesn't pay for Meta One Premium. Meta confirmed the change on a support page this week, which also notes that a subscription is not required to use the AI glasses in general.

What the new usage tiers actually look like

Read more
OASIS Smart ring hides a trackpad and it lets you whisper-control your computer
OASIS 1 pairs private AI dictation with a tiny trackpad built into the ring itself
OASIS Smart ring Featured on hand

For decades, we've interacted with computers using keyboards, mice, and touchscreens. OASIS thinks it's time for something different. The startup has unveiled the OASIS 1, a smart ring designed for private AI dictation, letting users whisper naturally while a built-in microphone transcribes their words. And when the AI inevitably gets something wrong? There's a tiny trackpad built into the ring to fix it.

A microphone on your finger, a trackpad in the same ring

Read more