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Oura Unveils “Cumulative Stress” Feature and New Interface

Akinola Ajibola by Akinola Ajibola
October 20, 2025
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Oura revealed a new “Cumulative Stress” feature and a revamped app experience on Monday. Also too, the business disclosed that it is working to get FDA approval for blood pressure features that assign a likelihood rating of hypertension to customers with more detailed stress-tracking information.

Oura’s revamped app offers three primary tabs for increased personalisation. The “Vitals” tab offers an overview of topics including cardiovascular trends, stress, and sleep, while the “Today” tab presents the most pertinent information for everyday choices. Offering information about the user’s long-term health, the “My Health” tab highlights chances for proactive care as well as strengths and trends. To illustrate the effects of daily activities, the tab additionally comprises “Habits” and “Routines” parts.

Using data from sleep, heart rate, temperature, and exercise, the new Cumulative Stress feature in the redesigned Oura app will give a weekly summary of how the body copes with and recovers from prolonged stress. Oura said that the new stress management dashboard, Cumulative Stress, and makeover will be accessible worldwide “in the coming weeks” on iOS and Android.

A 12-month view of the period and fertile window predictions, as opposed to the prior one-month view, is another improvement brought about by the app makeover for menstrual cycle insights.

The recently added Cumulative Stress function aids users in comprehending how persistent stress builds up and affects their bodies over time. It delivers a weekly update and a stress measurement based on data from the previous month. Five elements affect an individual’s cumulative stress: activity impact, temperature regulation, sleep micro-motions, heart stress reaction, and sleep continuity.

One of the senior executive, Jason Russell, who is also the vice president of consumer software products at Oura, reported that it’s much more than simply counting the number of hours spent under pressure. It measures several biological functions that are a sign of the effects of accumulated stress on the body. Thus, indicators of cumulative stress include measurements of your heart rate and heart rate variability following a stressful interval. Your understanding of thermodynamics. Your sleep patterns, including how you control your body temperature at night. You may experience what we refer to as micro-motions, which are twitches rather than just large movements that occur while you sleep. Your body will exhibit certain subtle signs if it is under a lot of cumulative stress.

In the upcoming weeks, the new feature will be available everywhere.

Oura, which is working on an FDA-approved blood pressure feature, recently revealed that it is starting a new Blood Pressure Profile study to investigate how it might passively follow important signals in the background to find early indicators of hypertension.

A blood pressure research that the business is developing with the FDA will be accessible to US users of its Oura Labs early access platform “in the coming months,” the company added. Creating a characteristic that can “identify early signs of hypertension,” which is the phrase for unusually high blood pressure in the blood vessels, is its purpose.

The project, which will begin later this year at experimental centre Oura Labs in the U.S., was approved by the Institutional Review Board. Oura Ring data will be combined with a brief check-in questionnaire about medication, lifestyle, and family history to inform study participants of their current risk of hypertension. The results of the evaluation will inform them of whether they have moderate, severe, or no symptoms of hypertension.

Following the FDA’s approval of the feature in September, a number of Apple Watch models currently offer hypertension notifications.

Individuals who exhibit significant symptoms will be urged to seek medical attention from a specialist. Also, according to Oura, the system will monitor changes over time, triggering recurring evaluations during the research.

The news on Monday follows Oura’s $900 million in new funding, which was spearheaded by Fidelity Management & Research Co. and included contributions from Whale Rock and Atreides as well as new investor ICONIQ.

Additionally, Oura just unveiled its first-ever charging case, the Oura Ring 4 Ceramic collection, and a new Health Panels feature that allows users to book blood work straight from the Oura app.

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Akinola Ajibola

Akinola Ajibola

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