Ahead of International Women’s Day, Ultrahuman is highlighting its Ultrahuman Ring AIR as a wearable built around women’s real biological patterns, with a focus on cycle and ovulation tracking.

Why It Matters: As interest in preventive healthcare and reproductive health awareness grows in the Philippines, more consumers are looking for tools that provide personalized insights based on real physiological data instead of fixed calendar estimates.
The lightweight smart ring is designed for 24/7 use and tracks skin temperature, heart rate variability, and resting heart rate. Users can access their health data without paying for a subscription.
Ultrahuman’s Cycle & Ovulation Pro uses continuous temperature patterns and other biomarkers to provide ovulation insights. The company said the feature is powered by technology adapted from OvuSense, a fertility monitoring platform developed over 15 years and trained on more than 260,000 cycles. It reported over 90 percent ovulation confirmation accuracy in equivalence testing.
The ring also introduces Cycle Flags, which use temperature trends to highlight patterns such as early or late ovulation, short luteal phases, possible anovulatory cycles, and trends that may be associated with conditions like PCOS. The company clarified that the feature is for general wellness use and is not a diagnostic or contraceptive tool.

Beyond cycle tracking, Ultrahuman offers Clue integration, allowing users to sync up to six months of cycle history with real-time biometric data. It is also developing a Migraine Management PowerPlug in collaboration with Click Therapeutics to support migraine management. Migraines affect an estimated 15 to 20 percent of the global population, with women experiencing them at nearly three times the rate of men.
Ultrahuman said Filipino consumers are increasingly exploring wearable tech and data-driven fitness tools, prompting demand for more personalized health tracking solutions.
With more health conversations happening this March, will smarter wearables play a bigger role in how Filipinas understand their bodies?
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