New ‘smart toilet’ can look for signs of disease

New 'smart toilet' can look for signs of disease

New York: An Indian American scientist-led team from Stanford University has developed a disease-detecting “precision health” smart toilet that is meant to monitor users for multiple signs of illness.

The toilet is fitted with technology that can detect a range of disease markers in stool and urine, including those of some cancers, such as colorectal or urologic cancers.

The device could be particularly appealing to individuals who are genetically predisposed to certain conditions, such as irritable bowel syndrome, prostate cancer or kidney failure, and want to keep on top of their health.

“Our concept dates back well over 15 years. When I’d bring it up, people would sort of laugh because it seemed like an interesting idea, but also a bit odd,” said study lead author Sanjiv “Sam” Gambhir from Stanford University in the US.

With a pilot study, published in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering, of 21 participants now completed, Gambhir and his team have made their vision of a precision health-focused smart toilet a reality.

Gambhir’s toilet is an ordinary toilet outfitted with gadgets inside the bowl.

These tools, a suite of different technologies, use motion sensing to deploy a mixture of tests that assess the health of any deposits.

Urine samples undergo physical and molecular analysis; stool assessment is based on physical characteristics.

The toilet automatically sends data extracted from any sample to a secure, cloud-based system for safekeeping.

In the future, Gambhir said, the system could be integrated into any health care provider’s record-keeping system for quick and easy access

The toilet falls into a category of technology known as continuous health monitoring, which encompasses wearables like smartwatches.

“The thing about a smart toilet, though, is that unlike wearables, you can’t take it off. Everyone uses the bathroom — there’s really no avoiding it — and that enhances its value as a disease-detecting device,” Gambhir said.

According to the study, about 37 per cent participants said they were “somewhat comfortable” with the idea, and 15 per cent said they were “very comfortable” with the idea of baring it all in the name of precision health.

One of the most important aspects of the smart toilet may well be one of the most surprising — and perhaps unnerving: It has a built-in identification system.

“The whole point is to provide precise, individualised health feedback, so we needed to make sure the toilet could discern between users. To do so, we made a flush lever that reads fingerprints,” Gambhir said.

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